Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Trigonometry Focus Comprehend, manipulate, graph, and prove trigonometric functions and identities. CHAPTER 13 Trigonometric Funtions Understand and apply trigonometry to various problems. Understand and apply the laws of sines and cosines. CHAPTER 14 Trigonometric Graphs and Identities Comprehend and manipulate the trigonometric functions, graphs and identities. 754 Unit 5 Algebra and Physics So, you want to be a rocket scientist? Have you ever built and launched a model rocket? If model rockets fascinate you, you may want to consider a career in the aerospace industry, such as aerospace engineering. The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) employs aerospace engineers and other people with expertise in aerospace fields. In this project, you will research applications of trigonometry as it applies to a possible career for you. Log on to ca.algebra2.com to begin. Unit 5 Trigonometry Ed and Chris Kumler 755 13 • • • Trigonometric Functions Trigonometry Standard 1.0 Students understand the notion of angle and how to measure it, in both degrees and radians. They can convert between degrees and radians. Trigonometry Standard 13.0 Students know the law of sines and the law of cosines and apply those laws to solve problems. (Key) Trigonometry Standard 19.0 Students are adept at using trigonometry in a variety of applications and word problems. Key Vocabulary solve a right triangle (p. 762) radian (p. 769) Law of Sines (p. 786) Law of Cosines (p. 793) circular function (p. 800) Real-World Link Buildings Surveyors use a trigonometric function to find the heights of buildings. Trigonometric Functions Make this Foldable to help you organize your notes. Begin with one sheet of construction paper and two pieces of grid paper. 1 Stack and Fold on the diagonal. Cut to form a triangular stack. 2 Staple edge to form a book. Label Trigonometric Functions. Trigonometri c Functions 756 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Bill Ross/CORBIS GET READY for Chapter 13 Diagnose Readiness You have two options for checking Prerequisite Skills. Option 2 Take the Online Readiness Quiz at ca.algebra2.com. Option 1 Take the Quick Check below. Refer to the Quick Review for help. Example 1 Find the missing measure of the right triangle. Find the value of x to the nearest tenth. (Prerequsite Skills, p. 881) 1. 2. x 21 5 x 8 8 9 b 6 3. 4. 11 x 10 x 24 20 c2 = a2 + b2 212 = 82 + b2 441 = 64 + b2 377 = b2 19.4 ≈ b Pythagorean Theorem Replace c with 21 and a with 8. Simplify. Subtract 64 from each side. Take the square root of each side. 5. LADDER There is a window that is 10 feet high. You want to use a ladder to get up to the window; you decide to put the ladder 3 feet away from the wall. How long should the ladder be? (Prerequsite Skills, p. 881) Find each missing measure. Write all radicals in simplest form. (Prerequsite Skill) x 6. 7. 45˚ 60˚ y y Example 2 Find the missing measures. Write all radicals in simplest form. 4 7 30˚ 16 x x 45˚ x 8. KITES A kite is being flown at a 45° angle. The string of the kite is 20 feet long. How high is the kite? (Prerequsite Skill) x2 + x2 2x2 2x2 x2 x x = 162 = 162 = 256 = 128 = √ 128 √ =8 2 Pythagorean Theorem Combine like terms. Simplify. Divide each side by 2. Take the square root of each side. Simplify. Chapter 13 Get Ready for Chapter 13 757 EXPLORE Spreadsheet Lab 13-1 Special Right Triangles Preparation for Trigonometry Standard 12.0 Students use trigonometry to determine unknown sides or angles in right triangles. ACTIVITY A The legs of a 45°-45°-90° triangle, a and b, are equal in measure. Use a spreadsheet to investigate the dimensions of 45°-45°-90° triangles. What patterns do you observe in the ratios of the side measures of these triangles? ⫽SQRT(A2^2⫹B2^2) ⫽B2/A2 ⫽B2/C2 ⫽A2/C2 B 45˚ c 45˚ b a 45-45-90 Triangles A B 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 a 1 2 3 4 5 b 1 2 3 4 5 C D E F 1.41421356 2.82842712 4.24264069 5.65685425 7.07106781 a/b 1 1 1 1 1 b/c 0.70710678 0.70710678 0.70710678 0.70710678 0.70710678 a/c 0.70710678 0.70710678 0.70710678 0.70710678 0.70710678 Sheet 1 Sheet 2 Sheet 3 The spreadsheet shows the formula that will calculate the length of side c. The formula uses the Pythagorean Theorem in the form c = √ a2 + b2 . Since 45°-45°-90° triangles share the same angle measures, the triangles listed in the spreadsheet are all similar triangles. Notice that all of the ratios of side b to side a are 1. All of the ratios of side b to side c and of side a to side c are approximately 0.71. MODEL AND ANALYZE B For Exercises 1–3, use the spreadsheet for 30°-60°-90° triangles. If the measure of one leg of a right triangle and the measure of the hypotenuse are in a ratio of 1 to 2, then the acute angles of the triangle measure 30° and 60°. A c 30˚ b 60˚ a C 4RIANGLES ! " # $ % & A B C BA BC AC 3HEET 3HEET 3HEET 1. Copy and complete the spreadsheet above. 2. Describe the relationship among the 30°-60°-90° triangles with the dimensions given. 3. What patterns do you observe in the ratios of the side measures of these triangles? 758 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions C 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry Main Ideas • Find values of trigonometric functions for acute angles. • Solve problems involving right triangles. Trigonometry Standard 12.0 Students use trigonometry to determine unknown sides or angles in right triangles. Trigonometry Standard 5.0 Students know the definitions of the tangent and cotangent functions and can graph them. Trigonometry Standard 6.0 Students know the definitions of the secant and cosecant functions and can graph them. New Vocabulary trigonometry trigonometric functions sine cosine tangent cosecant secant cotangent solve a right triangle angle of elevation angle of depression The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) provides regulations designed to make public buildings accessible to all. Under this act, the slope of an entrance ramp angle A designed for those with mobility 1 ft disabilities must not exceed a ratio 12 ft of 1 to 12. This means that for every 12 units of horizontal run, the ramp can rise or fall no more than 1 unit. When viewed from the side, a ramp forms a right triangle. The slope of the ramp can be described by the tangent of the angle the ramp 1 makes with the ground. In this example, the tangent of angle A is _ . 12 Trigonometric Values The tangent of an angle is one of the ratios used in trigonometry. Trigonometry is the study of the relationships among the angles and sides of a right triangle. Consider right triangle ABC in which the measure of acute angle A is identified by the Greek letter theta, . The sides of the triangle are the hypotenuse, the leg opposite , and the leg adjacent to . B hypotenuse opposite leg A adjacent leg C Using these sides, you can define six trigonometric functions: sine, cosine, tangent, cosecant, secant, and cotangent. These functions are abbreviated sin, cos, tan, csc, sec, and cot, respectively. Trigonometric Functions If is the measure of an acute angle of a right triangle, opp is the measure of the leg opposite , adj is the measure of the leg adjacent to , and hyp is the measure of the hypotenuse, then the following are true. Reading Math Trigonometry The word trigonometry is derived from two Greek words—trigon meaning triangle and metra meaning measurement. opp hyp hyp _ csc opp sin _ adj hyp hyp sec _ adj cos _ opp tan _ adj adj cot _ opp Notice that the sine, cosine, and tangent functions are reciprocals of the cosecant, secant, and cotangent functions, respectively. Thus, the following are also true. 1 csc _ sin 1 sec _ cos 1 cot _ tan Lesson 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry 759 Memorize Trigonometric Ratios SOH-CAH-TOA is a mnemonic device for remembering the first letter of each word in the ratios for sine, cosine, and tangent. opp sin = _ hyp adj cos = _ hyp opp tan = _ adj The domain of each of these trigonometric functions is the set of all acute angles of a right triangle. The values of the functions depend only on the measure of and not on the size of the right triangle. For example, consider sin in the figure at the right. Using 䉭ABC: Using 䉭AB⬘C⬘: BC sin θ = _ BC sin θ = _ AB B' B C' C A AB The right triangles are similar because they share angle θ. Since they are similar, BC BC =_ . Therefore, you the ratios of corresponding sides are equal. That is, _ AB AB will find the same value for sin θ regardless of which triangle you use. EXAMPLE Find Trigonometric Values Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle . C For this triangle, the leg opposite is A B , and the leg adjacent to is C B . Recall that the hypotenuse is always the longest side of a right triangle, in this case A C . Use opp 4, adj 3, and hyp 5 to write each trigonometric ratio. opp hyp 4 sin θ = _ = _ adj hyp 5 hyp adj 3 5 A 3 cos θ = _ = _ 5 hyp _5 csc θ = _ opp = 5 sec θ = _ = _ 4 3 B 4 opp adj 4 tan θ = _ = _ 3 adj _3 cot θ = _ opp = 4 1. Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle A in ABC above. Throughout Unit 5, a capital letter will be used to denote both a vertex of a triangle and the measure of the angle at that vertex. The same letter in lowercase will be used to denote the side opposite that angle and its measure. Use One Trigonometric Ratio to Find Another 2 If cos A = _ , find the value of tan A. 5 A _ 5 2 Whenever necessary or helpful, draw a diagram of the situation. 2 √ 21 B _ 21 √ 21 C _ 2 D √21 Read the Item Begin by drawing a right triangle and labeling one acute adj hyp 2 in this case, angle A. Since cos = _ and cos A = _ 5 5 a label the adjacent leg 2 and the hypotenuse 5. This represents 2 . the simplest triangle for which cos A = _ 5 2 760 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions A Solve the Item Use the Pythagorean Theorem to find a. Now find tan A. a2 + b2 = c2 Pythagorean Theorem tan A = _ a2 + 22 = 52 Replace b with 2 and c with 5. a2 + 4 = 25 opp adj √21 =_ 2 Tangent ratio Replace opp with √ 21 and adj with 2. Simplify. a2 = 21 Subtract 4 from each side. a = √ 21 Take the square root of each side. The answer is C. 3 2. If tan B = _ , find the value of sin B. 7 7 F _ 3 √ 58 G _ 3 √ 58 58 √ 58 J _ H_ 3 7 Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Angles that measure 30°, 45°, and 60° occur frequently in trigonometry. The table below gives the values of the six trigonometric functions for these angles. To remember these values, use the properties of 30°-60°-90° and 45°-45°-90° triangles. Trigonometric Values for Special Angles 30°-60°-90° Triangle 45°-45°-90° Triangle 30˚ 2x 60˚ x 3 x 45˚ x 2 45˚ x θ sin θ cos θ tan θ csc θ 30º _1 √ 3 _ √ 3 _ 2 2 √ 3 _ √ 3 45º √ 2 _ √ 2 _ 1 √ 2 √ 2 1 60º √ 3 _ _1 √3 2 √ 3 _ 2 √ 3 _ x 2 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 sec θ cot θ 3 3 You will verify some of these values in Exercises 39 and 40. Right Triangle Problems You can use trigonometric functions to solve problems involving right triangles. EXAMPLE Find a Missing Side Length of a Right Triangle Write an equation involving sin, cos, or tan that can be used to find the value of x. Then solve the equation. Round to the nearest tenth. 8 30˚ x The measure of the hypotenuse is 8. The side with the missing length is adjacent to the angle measuring 30°. The trigonometric function relating the adjacent side of a right triangle and the hypotenuse is the cosine function. Extra Examples at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry 761 adj hyp x cos 30° = _ 8 √ 3 x _ =_ 2 8 cos = _ 4 √ 3=x cosine ratio Replace θ with 30°, adj with x, and hyp with 8. √ 3 cos 30° = _ 2 Multiply each side by 8. The value of x is 4 √ 3 or about 6.9. Common Misconception The cos-1 x on a graphing calculator 1 does not find _ cos x . To find sec x or _ cos x , find 1 3. Write an equation involving sin, cos, or tan that can be used to find the value of x. Then solve the equation. Round to the nearest tenth. X cos x and then use the key. A calculator can be used to find the value of trigonometric functions for any angle, not just the special angles mentioned. Use SIN , COS , and TAN for sine, cosine, and tangent. Use these keys and the reciprocal key, , for cosecant, secant, and cotangent. Be sure your calculator is in degree mode. Here are some calculator examples. cos 46° KEYSTROKES: COS 46 %.4%2 cot 20° KEYSTROKES: TAN 20 %.4%2 0.6946583705 %.4%2 2.747477419 If you know the measures of any two sides of a right triangle or the measures of one side and one acute angle, you can determine the measures of all the sides and angles of the triangle. This process of finding the missing measures is known as solving a right triangle. EXAMPLE Solve a Right Triangle Solve 䉭XYZ. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. Error in Measurement The value of z in Example 4 is found using the secant instead of using the Pythagorean Theorem. This is because the secant uses values given in the problem rather than calculated values. Find x and z. x tan 35° _ 10 10 tan 35° x 7.0 x X Z 10 35˚ z sec 35° _ 10 1 _ _ z cos 35° 10 x z Y 1 _ z cos 35° 12.2 z Find Y. 35° Y 90° Angles X and Y are complementary. Y 55° Therefore, Y = 55°, x ≈ 7.0, and z ≈ 12.2. ' 4. Solve FGH. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. H & F Use the inverse capabilities of your calculator to find the measure of an angle when one of its trigonometric ratios is known. For example, use the sin-1 function to find the measure of an angle when the sine of the angle is known. You will learn more about inverses of trigonometric functions in Lesson 13-7. 762 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions ( EXAMPLE Find Missing Angle Measures of Right Triangles Solve 䉭ABC. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. B 13 You know the measures of the sides. You need to find A and B. opp 5 A sin A = _ Find A. sin A _ 13 5 12 C hyp Use a calculator and the [SIN-1] function to find the angle whose 5 . sine is _ 13 KEYSTROKES: 2nd [SIN-1] 5 ⫼ 13 %.4%2 22.61986495 To the nearest degree, A 23°. Find B. 23° B 90° Angles A and B are complementary. B 67° Solve for B. Therefore, A 23° and B 67°. 3 5. Solve RST. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 2 4 Trigonometry has many practical applications. Among the most important is the ability to find distances that either cannot or are not easily measured directly. Indirect Measurement BRIDGE CONSTRUCTION In order to construct a bridge, the width of the river must be determined. Suppose a stake is planted on one side of the river directly across from a second stake on the opposite side. At a distance 50 meters to the left of the stake, an angle of 82° is measured between the two stakes. Find the width of the river. Real-World Link There are an estimated 595,625 bridges in use in the United States. Source: betterroads.com Let w represent the width of the river at that location. Write an equation using a trigonometric function that involves the ratio of the distance w and 50. opp w tan _ tan 82° _ 50 50 tan 82° w 355.8 w Not drawn to scale w 82˚ 50 m adj Multiply each side by 50. The width of the river is about 355.8 meters. 6. John found two trees directly across from each other in a canyon. When he moved 100 feet from the tree on his side (parallel to the edge of the canyon), the angle formed by the tree on his side, John, and the tree on the other side was 70°. Find the distance across the canyon. Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry Getty Images 763 Angle of Elevation and Depression The angle of elevation and the angle of depression are congruent since they are alternate interior angles of parallel lines. Some applications of trigonometry use an angle of elevation or depression. In the figure at the right, the angle formed by the line of sight from the observer and a line parallel to the ground is called the angle of elevation. The angle formed by the line of sight from the plane and a line parallel to the ground is called the angle of depression. EXAMPLE angle of depression line of sight angle of elevation Use an Angle of Elevation SKIING The Aerial run in Snowbird, Utah, has an angle of elevation of 20.2°. Its vertical drop is 2900 feet. Estimate the length of this run. Let represent the length of the run. Write an equation using a trigonometric function that involves the ratio of and 2900. 2900 ft Not drawn to scale 20.2˚ 2900 sin 20.2° _ opp sin _ hyp 2900 _ Solve for . sin 20.2° ⬇ 8398.5 Real-World Link The length of the run is about 8399 feet. The average annual snowfall in Alpine Meadows, California, is 495 inches. The longest designated run there is 2.5 miles. 7. A ramp for unloading a moving truck has an angle of elevation of 32°. If the top of the ramp is 4 feet above the ground, estimate the length of the ramp. Source: www.onthesnow. com Example 1 (p. 760) Use a calculator. Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle θ. 2. 3. 1. 6 8 10 12 11 15 Example 2 4. (pp. 760–761) STANDARDS PRACTICE If tan 3, find the value of sin . 3 √ 10 B _ 3 A _ 10 Examples 3, 5 (pp. 761–763) 10 C _ 1 D _ 3 10 3 Write an equation involving sin, cos, or tan that can be used to find x. Then solve the equation. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and angles to the nearest degree. 6. 5. x 15 23˚ x˚ 32 21 764 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions John P. Kelly/Getty Images Examples 4, 5 (pp. 762–763) 7. A = 45º, b = 6 (p. 763) Example 7 (p. 764) HOMEWORK HELP For See Exercises Examples 12–14 1, 2 15–18 3 21–26 4 19, 20 5 27, 28 6, 7 c b 8. B = 56º, c = 6 9. b = 7, c = 18 Example 6 A Solve 䉭ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 10. a = 14, b = 13 B C a 11. BRIDGES Tom wants to build a rope bridge between his tree house and Roy’s tree house. Suppose Tom’s tree house is directly behind Roy’s tree house. At a distance of 20 meters to the left of Tom’s tree house, an angle of 52º is measured between the two tree houses. Find the length of the rope bridge. 12. AVIATION When landing, a jet will average a 3º angle of descent. What is the altitude x, to the nearest foot, of a jet on final descent as it passes over an airport beacon 6 miles from the start of the runway? Not drawn to scale 3˚ x runway 6 mi Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle θ. 13. 14. 11 15. 28 21 16 4 12 Write an equation involving sin, cos, or tan that can be used to find x. Then solve the equation. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and angles to the nearest degree. 17. 16. 18. 60˚ x 3 x x 17.8 30˚ 10 19. 54˚ 23.7 x 17.5˚ 20. 21. 15 16 36 x˚ 22 Real-World Career Surveyor Land surveyors manage survey parties that measure distances, directions, and angles between points, lines, and contours on Earth’s surface. For more information, go to ca.algebra2.com. SuperStock Solve 䉭ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 22. A = 16°, c = 14 23. B = 27°, b = 7 24. A = 34°, a = 10 25. B = 15°, c = 25 27. A = 45°, c = 7 √2 26. B = 30°, b = 11 x˚ A c b C a B 28. SURVEYING A surveyor stands 100 feet from a building and sights the top of the building at a 55° angle of elevation. Find the height of the building. Lesson 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry 765 29. TRAVEL In a sightseeing boat near the base of the Horseshoe Falls at Niagara Falls, a passenger estimates the angle of elevation to the top of the falls to be 30°. If the Horseshoe Falls are 173 feet high, what is the distance from the boat to the base of the falls? Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle θ. 30. 31. 9 32. 2 5 15 25 7 Solve 䉭ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 33. B = 18°, a = √15 34. A = 10°, b = 15 35. b = 6, c = 13 36. a = 4, c = 9 7 37. tan B = _ ,b=7 8 1 38. sin A = _ ,a=5 A c b a C 3 B 39. Using the 30°-60°-90° triangle shown in the lesson, verify each value. 1 a. sin 30° = _ 2 √ 3 2 √ 3 2 b. cos 30° _ c. sin 60° _ 40. Using the 45°-45°-90° triangle shown in the lesson, verify each value. √ 2 2 a. sin 45° _ You can use the tangent ratio to determine the maximum height of a rocket. Visit ca.algebra2.com to continue work on your project. √ 2 2 b. cos 45° _ c. tan 45° 1 EXERCISE For Exercises 41 and 42, use the following information. A preprogrammed workout on a treadmill consists of intervals walking at various rates and angles of incline. A 1% incline means 1 unit of vertical rise for every 100 units of horizontal run. 41. At what angle, with respect to the horizontal, is the treadmill bed when set at a 10% incline? Round to the nearest degree. 42. If the treadmill bed is 40 inches long, what is the vertical rise when set at an 8% incline? 43. GEOMETRY Find the area of the regular hexagon with point O as its center. (Hint: First find the value of x.) 6 O x 3 EXTRA PRACTICE See pages 920, 938. Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com 44. GEOLOGY A geologist measured a 40° of elevation to the top of a mountain. After moving 0.5 kilometer farther away, the angle of elevation was 34°. How high is the top of the mountain? (Hint: Write a system of equations in two variables.) 766 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Not drawn to scale h 34˚ 0.5 km 40˚ x H.O.T. Problems 45. OPEN ENDED Draw two right triangles ABC and DEF for which sin A = sin D. What can you conclude about ABC and DEF? Justify your reasoning. 46. REASONING Find a counterexample to the statement It is always possible to solve a right triangle. 47. CHALLENGE Explain why the sine and cosine of an acute angle are never greater that 1, but the tangent of an acute angle may be greater than 1. 48. Writing in Math Use the information on page 759 to explain how trigonometry is used in building construction. Include an explanation as to why the ratio of vertical rise to horizontal run on an entrance ramp is the tangent of the angle the ramp makes with the horizontal. 25 49. ACT/SAT If the secant of angle is _ , 7 what is the sine of angle ? 5 A _ 25 7 B _ 25 24 C _ 25 25 D _ 7 50. REVIEW A person holds one end of a rope that runs through a pulley and has a weight attached to the other end. Assume the weight is directly beneath the pulley. The section of rope between the pulley and the weight is 12 feet long. The rope bends through an angle of 33 degrees in the pulley. How far is the person from the weight? F 7.8 ft H 12.9 ft G 10.5 ft J 14.3 ft Determine whether each situation would produce a random sample. Write yes or no and explain your answer (Lesson 12-9) 51. surveying band members to find the most popular type of music at your school 52. surveying people coming into a post office to find out what color cars are most popular Find each probability if a coin is tossed 4 times (Lesson 12-8) 53. P(exactly 2 heads) 54. P(4 heads) 55. P(at least 1 head) 57. x5 5x3 4x 0 58. d √ d 132 0 Solve each equation (Lesson 6-6) 56. y4 64 0 PREREQUISITE SKILL Find each product. Include the appropriate units with your answer. (Lesson 6-1) ( ) 4 quarts 59. 5 gallons _ ( 1 gallon ) 2 square meters 61. __ 30 dollars 5 dollars ( 1 mile ) 5280 feet 60. 6.8 miles _ (5 minutes ) 4 liters 62. _ 60 minutes Lesson 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry 767 13-2 Angles and Angle Measure Main Ideas • Change Text radian measure to degree TARGETED measure TEKS 1.1(#) and vice Textversa. • Identify coterminal angles. New Vocabulary Trigonometry Standard 1.0 if this turns, the 2nd, Students line indentsthe (1) notion en # of understand angle and how to measure it, in both degrees and radians. They can convert between degrees and radians. text The Ferris wheel at Navy Pier in Chicago has a 140-foot diameter and 40 gondolas equally spaced around its circumference. The average angular velocity ω of one of θ the gondolas is given by ω = _ t where θ is the angle through which the gondola has revolved after a specified amount of time t. For example, if a gondola revolves through an angle of 225° in 40 seconds, then its average angular velocity is 225° ÷ 40 or about 5.6° per second. New Vocabulary initial side terminal side standard position unit circle radian coterminal angles Reading Math Angle of Rotation In trigonometry, an angle is sometimes referred to as an angle of rotation. ANGLE MEASUREMENT What does an angle measuring 225° look like? In Lesson 13-1, you worked only with acute angles, those measuring between 0° and 90°, but angles can have any real number measurement. On a coordinate plane, an angle may be generated by the rotation of two rays that share a fixed endpoint at the origin. One ray, called the initial side of the angle, is fixed along the positive x-axis. The other ray, called the terminal side of the angle, can rotate about the center. An angle positioned so that its vertex is at the origin and its initial side is along the positive x-axis is said to be in standard position. y 90˚ terminal side O initial side 180˚ vertex 270˚ The measure of an angle is determined by the amount and direction of rotation from the initial side to the terminal side. Positive Angle Measure counterclockwise Negative Angle Measure clockwise y y 225˚ O x O ⫺210˚ Animation ca.algebra2.com 768 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions L. Clarke/CORBIS x x When terminal sides rotate, they may sometimes make one or more revolutions. An angle whose terminal side has made exactly one revolution has a measure of 360°. y 495˚ x O 360˚ EXAMPLE Draw an Angle in Standard Position Draw an angle with the given measure in standard position. a. 240° 240° = 180° + 60° Draw the terminal side of the angle 60° counterclockwise past the negative x-axis. y 240˚ x O 60˚ y b. -30° The angle is negative. Draw the terminal side of the angle 30° clockwise from the positive x-axis. Another unit used to measure angles is a radian. The definition of a radian is based on the concept of a unit circle, which is a circle of radius 1 unit whose center is at the origin of a coordinate system. One radian is the measure of an angle θ in standard position whose rays intercept an arc of length 1 unit on the unit circle. 2 radians or 360˚ O ⫺30˚ 1B. -110° 1A. 450° y x O x y (0, 1) measures 1 radian. 1 (⫺1, 0) 1 unit (1, 0) O x (0, ⫺1) The circumference of any circle is 2πr, where r is the radius measure. So the circumference of a unit circle is 2π(1) or 2π units. Therefore, an angle representing one complete revolution of the circle measures 2π radians. This same angle measures 360°. Therefore, the following equation is true. 2π radians = 360° As with degrees, the measure of an angle in radians is positive if its rotation is counterclockwise. The measure is negative if the rotation is clockwise. Extra Examples at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-2 Angles and Angle Measure 769 To change angle measures from radians to degrees or vice versa, solve the equation above in terms of both units. 2π radians = 360° 2π radians = 360° 2π radians 360° _ =_ 2π radians 360° _ =_ 360 360 2π 2π 180° 1 radian = _ π π radians _ = 1° 180 1 radian is about 57 degrees. Reading Math Radian Measure The word radian is usually omitted when angles are expressed in radian measure. Thus, when no units are given for an angle measure, radian measure is implied. 1 degree is about 0.0175 radian. These equations suggest a method for converting between radian and degree measure. Radian and Degree Measure • To rewrite the radian measure of an angle in degrees, multiply the number 180° of radians by _ . π radians • To rewrite the degree measure of an angle in radians, multiply the number π radians of degrees by _ . 180° EXAMPLE Convert Between Degree and Radian Measure Rewrite the degree measure in radians and the radian measure in degrees. 7π b. -_ a. 60° 4 π radians 60° = 60° _ ( 180° ) ( 4 60π π or _ radians =_ 180 You will find it useful to learn equivalent degree and radian measures for the special angles shown in the diagram at the right. This diagram is more easily learned by memorizing the equivalent degree and radian measures for the first quadrant and for 90°. All of the other special angles are multiples of these angles. 4 3π 2B. _ 8 y 3 4 770 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 2 3 120˚ 135˚ 5 6 2 90˚ 150˚ 180˚ O 210˚ 7 6 5 4 Interactive Lab ca.algebra2.com 4 1260° or -315° = -_ 3 2A. 190° 180° ) (_ π radians ) 7π = 7π radians -_ -_ 225˚ 240˚ 4 3 3 60˚ 4 6 45˚ 30˚ 0˚ 360˚ 0 2 330˚ 270˚ 3 2 315˚ 300˚ 5 3 11 6 7 4 x EXAMPLE Measure an Angle in Degrees and Radians TIME Find both the degree and radian measures of the angle through which the hour hand on a clock rotates from 1:00 P.M. to 3:00 P.M. The numbers on a clock divide it into 12 equal parts with 12 equal angles. The angle from 1 to 3 on the clock represents 2 1 1 _ or _ of a complete rotation of 360°. _ of 360° is 60°. 6 12 6 Since the rotation is clockwise, the angle through which the hour hand rotates is negative. Therefore, the angle measures -60°. π . So the equivalent radian 60° has an equivalent radian measure of _ 3 π measure of -60° is -_ . 3 Real-World Link The clock tower in the United Kingdom Parliament House was opened in 1859. The copper minute hand in each of the four clocks of the tower is 4.2 meters long, 100 kilograms in mass, and travels a distance of about 190 kilometers a year. Source: parliament.uk/index. cfm 3. How long does it take for a minute hand on a clock to pass through 2.5π radians? COTERMINAL ANGLES If you graph a 405° angle and a 45° angle in standard position on the same coordinate plane, you will notice that the terminal side of the 405° angle is the same as the terminal side of the 45° angle. When two angles in standard position have the same terminal sides, they are called coterminal angles. y 45˚ x O 405˚ Notice that 405° - 45° = 360°. In degree measure, coterminal angles differ by an integral multiple of 360°. You can find an angle that is coterminal to a given angle by adding or subtracting a multiple of 360°. In radian measure, a coterminal angle is found by adding or subtracting a multiple of 2π. EXAMPLE Find Coterminal Angles Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. a. 240° A positive angle is 240° + 360° or 600°. A negative angle is 240° - 360° or -120°. Coterminal Angles Notice in Example 4b that it is necessary to subtract a multiple of 2 to find a coterminal angle with negative measure. 9π b. _ 4 9π 17π + 2π or _ . A positive angle is _ 4 4 9π 7π A negative angle is _ - 2(2π) or -_ . 4 4 4A. 15° 9π _ 17π _ + 8π = _ 4 4 4 9π -16π -7π _ + (_ =_ 4 4 ) 4 π 4B. -_ 4 Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-2 Angles and Angle Measure CORBIS 771 Example 1 (p. 769) Example 2 (p. 770) Draw an angle with the given measure in standard position. 1. 70° 2. 300° 3. 570° 4. -45° Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. 5. 130° 6. -10° 7. 485° 3π 8. _ Example 3 (pp. 770–771) 19π 10. _ π 9. -_ 3 6 4 ASTRONOMY For Exercises 11 and 12, use the following information. Earth rotates on its axis once every 24 hours. 11. How long does it take Earth to rotate through an angle of 315°? π 12. How long does it take Earth to rotate through an angle of _ ? 6 Example 4 (p. 771) Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. π 13. 60° 14. 425° 15. _ 3 HOMEWORK HELP For See Exercises Examples 16–19 1 20–27 2 28–33 4 34, 35 3 Draw an angle with the given measure in standard position. 16. 235° 17. 270° 18. 790° 19. 380° Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. 20. 120° 21. 60° 22. -15° 23. -225° 5π 24. _ 6 11π 25. _ π 26. -_ 4 π 27. -_ 3 4 Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. 28. 225° 29. 30° 30. -15° 3π 31. _ 4 7π 32. _ 5π 33. -_ 6 4 GEOMETRY For Exercises 34 and 35, use the following information. A sector is a region of a circle that is bounded by a central angle θ and its intercepted arc. The area A of a sector with radius r and central angle θ is given by Sector Area r 1 2 A=_ r θ, where θ is measured in radians. 2 _ radians 34. Find the area of a sector with a central angle of 4π 3 in a circle whose radius measures 10 inches. 35. Find the area of a sector with a central angle of 150° in a circle whose radius measures 12 meters. Draw an angle with the given measure in standard position. 2π 36. -150° 37. -50° 38. π 39. -_ 3 772 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. 40. 660° 41. 570° 42. 158° 43. 260° 29π 44. _ 4 17π 45. _ 46. 9 6 47. 3 Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. 48. -140° 49. 368° 50. 760° 2π 51. -_ 9π 52. _ 17π 53. _ 2 3 4 54. DRIVING Some sport-utility vehicles (SUVs) use 15-inch radius wheels. When driven 40 miles per hour, determine the measure of the angle through which a point on the wheel travels every second. Round to both the nearest degree and the nearest radian. 55. ENTERTAINMENT Suppose the gondolas on the Navy Pier Ferris Wheel were numbered from 1 through 40 consecutively in a counterclockwise fashion. If you were sitting in gondola number 3 and the wheel were to rotate Real-World Link Vehicle tires are marked with numbers and symbols that indicate the specifications of the tire, including its size and the speed the tire can safely travel. Source: usedtire.com EXTRA PRACTICE See pages 920, 938. 47π counterclockwise through _ 10 radians, which gondola used to be in the position that you are in now? 12 10 8 6 14 You are here. 4 2 16 18 40 20 38 36 22 34 24 26 56. CARS Use the Area of a Sector Formula in Exercises 34 and 35 to find the area swept by the rear windshield wiper of the car shown at the right. 28 30 32 135˚ 9 in. 16 in. Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com H.O.T. Problems 57. OPEN ENDED Draw and label an example of an angle with negative measure in standard position. Then find an angle with positive measure that is coterminal with this angle. π radians with 58. CHALLENGE A line with positive slope makes an angle of _ 2 the positive x-axis at the point (2, 0). Find an exact equation for this line. y 59. CHALLENGE If (a, b) is on a circle that has radius r and center at the origin, prove that each of the following points is also on this circle. a. (a, -b) b. (b, a) (a, b ) r O c. (b, -a) x 1 of a revolution in degrees. 60. REASONING Express _ 8 Lesson 13-2 Angles and Angle Measure PunchStock 773 61. Writing in Math Use the information on page 768 to explain how angles can be used to describe circular motion. Include an explanation of the significance of angles of more than 180° in terms of circular motion, an explanation of the significance of angles with negative measure in terms of circular motion, and an interpretation of a rate of more than 360° per minute. 62. ACT/SAT Choose the radian measure that is equal to 56°. 63. REVIEW Angular velocity is defined by the equation π A _ θ ω=_ , where θ is 15 _ B 7π 45 14π _ C 45 π D _ 3 t usually expressed in radians and t represents time. Find the angular velocity in radians per second of a point on a bicycle tire if it completes 2 revolutions in 3 seconds. π F _ 3 π _ G 2 2π H _ 3 4π J _ 3 Solve ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. (Lesson 13-1) 64. A = 34°, b = 5 65. B = 68°, b = 14.7 3 67. a = 0.4, b = 0.4 √ 66. B = 55°, c = 16 Find the margin of sampling error. (Lesson 12-9) 68. p = 72%, n = 100 69. p = 50%, n = 200 Determine whether each situation involves a permutation or a combination. Then find the number of possibilities. (Lesson 12-2) 70. choosing an arrangement of 5 CDs from your 30 favorite CDs 71. choosing 3 different types of snack foods out of 7 at the store to take on a trip Find [g h](x) and [h g](x). (Lesson 7-1) 72. g(x) = 2x h(x) = 3x - 4 73. g(x) = 2x + 5 h(x) = 2x2 - 3x + 9 PREREQUISITE SKILL Simplify each expression. (Lesson 7-5) 2 74. _ 3 75. _ 4 76. _ 5 77. _ 78. 79. √ 3 √ 10 774 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions √ 5 √ 7 _ √ 2 √ 6 √ 5 _ √ 8 Algebra Lab EXTEND 13-2 Investigating Regular Polygons Using Trigonometry Trigonometry Standard 19.0 Students are adept at using trigonometry in a variety of applications and word problems. ACTIVITY • Use a compass to draw a circle with a radius of one inch. Inscribe an equilateral triangle inside of the circle. To do this, use a protractor to measure three angles of 120° at the center 360° of the circle, since _ 120°. Then connect the points where 3 the sides of the angles intersect the circle using a straightedge. • The apothem of a regular polygon is a segment that is drawn from the center of the polygon perpendicular to a side of the polygon. Use the cosine of angle θ to find the length of an apothem, labeled a in the diagram below. ANALYZE THE RESULTS 1. Make a table like the one shown below and record the length of the apothem of the equilateral triangle. Number of Sides, n θ 3 60 4 45 5 6 7 a a 1 in. 120˚ 8 9 10 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Inscribe each regular polygon named in the table in a circle of radius one inch. Copy and complete the table. What do you notice about the measure of θ as the number of sides of the inscribed polygon increases? What do you notice about the values of a? MAKE A CONJECTURE Suppose you inscribe a 20-sided regular polygon inside a circle. Find the measure of angle θ. Write a formula that gives the measure of angle θ for a polygon with n sides. Write a formula that gives the length of the apothem of a regular polygon inscribed in a circle of radius one inch. How would the formula you wrote in Exercise 6 change if the radius of the circle was not one inch? Extend 13–2 Algebra Lab: Investigating Regular Polygons Using Trigonometry Aaron Haupt 775 13-3 Trigonometric Functions of General Angles Main Ideas • Find values of trigonometric functions for general angles. • Use reference angles to find values of trigonometric functions. Trigonometry Standard 9.0 Students compute, by hand, the values of the trigonometric functions and the inverse trigonometric functions at various standard points. New Vocabulary quadrantal angle reference angle A skycoaster consists of a large arch from which two steel cables hang and are attached to riders suited together in a harness. A third cable, coming from a larger tower behind the arch, is attached with a ripcord. Riders are hoisted to the top of the O larger tower, pull the ripcord, and then plunge toward Earth. They swing through the arch, reaching speeds of more than 60 miles per hour. After the first several swings of a certain skycoaster, the angle θ of the riders from the center of the arch is given by θ = 0.2 cos (1.6t), where t is the time in seconds after leaving the bottom of their swing. Trigonometric Functions and General Angles In Lesson 13-1, you found values of trigonometric functions whose domains were the set of all , of a right triangle. For t 0 in the acute angles, angles between 0 and _ 2 . In equation above, you must find the cosine of an angle greater than _ 2 this lesson, we will extend the domain of trigonometric functions to include angles of any measure. Trigonometric Functions, θ in Standard Position Let θ be an angle in standard position and let P(x, y) be a point on the terminal side of θ. Using the Pythagorean Theorem, the distance r from the x2 + y2 . The trigonometric origin to P is given by r = √ functions of an angle in standard position may be defined as follows. y y sin = _r x cos = _ r tan = _ x, x ≠ 0 r csc = _ y, y 0 r sec = _ x, x ≠ 0 x cot = _ y, y ≠ 0 EXAMPLE From the coordinates, you know that x 5 and y –12. Use the Pythagorean Theorem to find r. courtesy of Skycoaster of Florida P (x, y ) r y x x O Evaluate Trigonometric Functions for a Given Point Find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of if the terminal side of contains the point (5, ⫺12). 776 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions y y x O r (5, ⫺12) r x2 + y2 √ Pythagorean Theorem √ 52 + (–12)2 Replace x with 5 and y with 2-12. √ 169 or 13 Simplify. Now, use x 5, y -12, and r 13 to write the ratios. y sin _r -12 12 _ or -_ 13 tan _ x 5 _ 12 12 -_ or -_ 13 13 r csc _ y 5 r sec _ x 13 13 _ or -_ -12 y x cos _ r x cot _ y 13 _ 5 5 _ or -_ -12 5 12 5 12 1. Find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of θ if the terminal side of θ contains the point (-8, -15). If the terminal side of angle θ lies on one of the axes, θ is called a quadrantal angle. The quadrantal angles are 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270°. Notice that for these angles either x or y is equal to 0. Since division by zero is undefined, two of the trigonometric values are undefined for each quadrantal angle. Quadrantal Angles θ = 0° or 0 radians θ = 90° or _ radians π 2 y y (0, r ) O (r, 0) x EXAMPLE 3π θ = 270° or _ radians θ = 180° or π radians 2 y y x O (r, 0) O x O x (0, r ) Quadrantal Angles y Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for an angle in standard position that measures 270°. O When 270°, x 0 and y -r. y sin _r -r _ r or -1 r csc _ y r _ -r or -1 x cos _ r 0 _ r or 0 r sec _ x _r or undefined 0 x (0, r ) y tan _ x -r _ or undefined 0 x cot _ y 0 _ -r or 0 2. Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for an angle in standard position that measures 180°. Lesson 13-3 Trigonometric Functions of General Angles 777 Reading Math Theta Prime θ is read theta prime. Animation ca.algebra2.com Reference Angles To find the values of trigonometric functions of angles greater than 90° (or less than 0°), you need to know how to find the measures of reference angles. If θ is a nonquadrantal angle in standard position, its reference angle, θ, is defined as the acute angle formed by the terminal side of θ and the x-axis. y x O You can use the rule below to find the reference angle for any nonquadrantal angle θ where 0° θ 360° (or 0 θ 2). Reference Angle Rule For any nonquadrantal angle θ, 0° θ 360° (or 0 θ 2π), its reference angle θ is defined as follows. y Quadrant I y θ = θ x O y y O x x O Quadrant II O Quadrant III θ = 180° - θ (θ = π - θ) x Quadrant IV θ = θ - 180° (θ = θ - π) = 360° - θ (θ = 2π - θ) If the measure of θ is greater than 360° or less than 0°, its reference angle can be found by associating it with a coterminal angle of positive measure between 0° and 360°. EXAMPLE Find the Reference Angle for a Given Angle Sketch each angle. Then find its reference angle. a. 300° Because the terminal side of 300° lies in Quadrant IV, the reference angle is 360° - 300° or 60° y 300˚ O x 2 b. -_ 3 2 2 4 A coterminal angle of -_ is 2 - _ or _ . 3 3 y 3 4 3 Because the terminal side of this angle lies in 4 Quadrant III, the reference angle is _ - or _ . 3 3A. -200° 778 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 3 2 3B. _ 3 O x 2 3 To use the reference angle θ to find a trigonometric value of θ, you need to know the sign of that function for an angle θ. From the function definitions, these signs are determined by x and y, since r is always positive. Thus, the sign of each trigonometric function is determined by the quadrant in which the terminal side of θ lies. The chart summarizes the signs of the trigonometric functions for each quadrant. Quadrant Function sin or csc I II III IV – – cos or sec – – tan or cot – – Use the following steps to find the value of a trigonometric function of any angle θ. Step 1 Find the reference angle θ. Step 2 Find the value of the trigonometric function for θ. Step 3 Using the quadrant in which the terminal side of θ lies, determine the sign of the trigonometric function value of θ. EXAMPLE Look Back To review trigonometric values of angles measuring 30°, 45°, and 60°, see Lesson 13-1. Use a Reference Angle to Find a Trigonometric Value Find the exact value of each trigonometric function. a. sin 120° Because the terminal side of 120° lies in Quadrant II, the reference angle θ is 180° – 120° or 60°. The sine function is positive in Quadrant II, so √ 3 2 sin 120º sin 60° or _ . y 60˚ 120˚ x O 7π b. cot _ 4 7 lies in Quadrant IV, Because the terminal side of _ 4 7 the reference angle is 2 - _ or _ . The cotangent 4 4 function is negative in Quadrant IV. y 7 4 x O 4 7 -cot _ cot _ 4 4 π radians =5 45° -cot 45° _ 4 -1 4A. cos 135° cot 45° =5 1 5π 4B. tan _ 6 If you know the quadrant that contains the terminal side of in standard position and the exact value of one trigonometric function of , you can find the values of the other trigonometric functions of using the function definitions. Lesson 13-3 Trigonometric Functions of General Angles 779 EXAMPLE Quadrant and One Trigonometric Value of θ Suppose is an angle in standard position whose terminal side is in 4 . Find the exact values of the remaining Quadrant III and sec –_ 3 five trigonometric functions of . Draw a diagram of this angle, labeling a point P(x, y) on the terminal side of θ. Use the definition of secant to find the values of x and r. 4 sec – _ 3 _r – _4 x 3 y x O y Given r P (x, y ) Definition of secant Since x is negative in Quadrant III and r is always positive, x –3 and r 4. Use these values and the Pythagorean Theorem to find y. x 2 y2 r 2 Pythagorean Theorem (–3)2 y 2 42 Replace x with -3 and r with 4. y2 16 - 9 Simplify. Then subtract 9 from each side. y √ 7 Simplify. Then take the square root of each side. y – √ 7 y is negative in Quadrant III. Use x –3, y – √7, and r 4 to write the remaining trigonometric ratios. y sin _r x cos _ r √ – √7 7 4 4 y tan _ x √7 √ – 7 _ or _ 3 –3 x _ cot y _ or -_ 3 -_ 4 r csc _ y 4 √ 7 7 4 =_ or -_ – √ 7 3 √7 7 3 or _ _ √7 5. Suppose θ is an angle in standard position whose terminal side is in 2 Quadrant IV and tan θ = -_ . Find the exact values of the remaining 3 five trigonometric functions of θ. Just as an exact point on the terminal side of an angle can be used to find trigonometric function values, trigonometric function values can be used to find the exact coordinates of a point on the terminal side of an angle. 780 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions x Find Coordinates Given a Radius and an Angle ROBOTICS In a robotics competition, a robotic arm 4 meters long is to pick up an object at point A and release it into a container at point B. The robot’s arm is programmed to rotate through an angle of precisely 135° to accomplish this task. What is the new position of the object relative to the pivot point O? Real-World Link B 135˚ A O 4m With the pivot point at the origin and the angle through which the arm rotates in standard position, point A has coordinates (4, 0). The reference angle for 135° is 180° – 135° or 45°. RoboCup is an annual event in which teams from all over the world compete in a series of soccer matches in various classes according to the size and intellectual capacity of their robot. The robots are programmed to react to the ball and communicate with each other. Let the position of point B have coordinates (x, y). Then, use the definitions of sine and cosine to find the value of x and y. The value of r is the length of the robotic arm, 4 meters. Because B is in Quadrant II, the cosine of 135° is negative. x r x –cos 45° _ 4 √ 2 x _ _ – 2 4 cos 135° _ Source: www.robocup.corg –2 √ 2x y r y sin 45° _ 4 y √ 2 _ _ 2 4 sin 135° _ cosine ratio 180° – 135° 5 45° √ 2 cos 45° _ 2 2 √2 y Solve for x. sine ratio 180° – 35° 45° √2 sin 45° _ 2 Solve for y. The exact coordinates of B are (–2 √2, 2 √ 2 ). Since 2 √2 is about 2.83, the object is about 2.83 meters to the left of the pivot point and about 2.83 meters in front of the pivot point. 6. After releasing the object in the container at point B, the arm must rotate another 75°. What is the new position of the end of the arm relative to the pivot point O? Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Example 1 (pp. 776–777) Find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of θ if the terminal side of θ in standard position contains the given point. 1. (-15, 8) Examples 2, 4 (pp. 777, 779) 2. (-3, 0) 3. (4, 4) Find the exact value of each trigonometric function. 5 4. sin 300º 5. cos 180° 6. tan _ 7 7. sec _ 3 Example 3 (p. 778) Example 5 (p. 780) 6 Sketch each angle. Then find its reference angle. 7 9. _ 8. 235° 10. -240° 4 Suppose θ is an a ngle in standard position whose terminal side is in the given quadrant. For each function, find the exact values of the remaining five trigonometric functions of θ. 1 , Quadrant II 11. cos θ – _ 2 √ 2 2 12. cot θ =- _, Quadrant IV Lesson 13-3 Trigonometric Functions of General Angles Reuters NewMedia Inc./CORBIS 781 Example 6 (p. 781) 13. BASKETBALL The maximum height H in feet that a basketball reaches after being shot is given by the V0 ⫽ 30 ft/s 70˚ V02 (sin )2 formula H _ , where V0 represents the 64 initial velocity and θ represents the degree measure of the angle that the path of the basketball makes with the ground. Find the maximum height reached by a ball shot with an initial velocity of 30 feet per second at an angle of 70°. HOMEWORK HELP For See Exercises Examples 14–17 1 18–25 2, 4 26–29 3 30–33 5 34–36 6 Find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of θ if the terminal side of θ in standard position contains the given point. 14. (7, 24) 15. (2, 1) 16. (5, -8) 17. (4, -3) 18. (0, -6) 19. (-1, 0) 20. 冢 √ 2 , - √2冣 21. 冢- √3, – √6冣 Find the exact value of each trigonometric function. 22. sin 240° 23. sec 120° 24. tan 300° 25. cot 510° 26. csc 5400° 11 27. cos _ 5 28. cot 冢- _ 冣 3 29. sin _ 32. cos (-30°) 5 33. tan 冢– _ 冣 3 17 _ 31. csc 6 3 30. sec _ 2 4 6 4 Sketch each angle. Then find its reference angle. 34. 315° 35. 240° 38. -210° 39. -125° 5 36. _ 5 37. _ 6 4 13 40. _ 7 2 41. - _ 3 Suppose θ is an angle in standard position whose terminal side is in the given quadrant. For each function, find the exact values of the remaining five trigonometric functions of θ. 3 42. cos θ _ , Quadrant IV 5 1 _ 44. sin θ Quadrant II 3, 1 43. tan - _ , Quadrant II 5 1 45. cot _ , Quadrant III 2 BASEBALL For Exercises 46 and 47, use the following information. 2 V0 sin 2 The formula R _ gives the distance of a baseball that is hit at an initial 32 velocity of V0 feet per second at an angle of with the ground. Real-World Link If a major league pitcher throws a pitch at 95-miles per hour, it takes only about 4-tenths of a second for the ball to travel the 60-feet, 6-inches from the pitcher’s mound to home plate. In that time, the hitter must decide whether to swing at the ball and if so, when to swing. 46. If the ball was hit with an initial velocity of 80 feet per second at an angle of 30°, how far was it hit? 47. Which angle will result in the greatest distance? Explain your reasoning. y 48. CAROUSELS Anthony’s little brother gets on a carousel that is 8 meters in diameter. At the start of the ride, his brother is 3 meters from the fence to the ride. How far will his brother be from the fence after the carousel rotates 240°? Source: exploratorium.edu 782 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Otto Greule/Allsport 3m 240˚ O (4, 0) (x, y ) ?m Fence x 49. SKYCOASTING Mikhail and Anya visit a local amusement park to ride a skycoaster. After the first several swings, the angle the skycoaster makes with the vertical is modeled by θ 0.2 cos t, with θ measured in radians and t measured in seconds. Determine the measure of the angle for t 0, 0.5, 1, 1.5, 2, 2.5, and 3 in both radians and degrees. EXTRA PRACTICE See pages 920, 938 50. NAVIGATION Ships and airplanes measure distance in nautical miles. The formula 1 nautical mile 6077 - 31 cos 2θ feet, where θ is the latitude in degrees, can be used to find the approximate length of a nautical mile at a certain latitude. Find the length of a nautical mile where the latitude is 60°. Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com H.O.T. Problems 51. OPEN ENDED Give an example of an angle for which the sine is negative and the tangent is positive. 52. REASONING Determine whether the following statement is true or false. If true, explain your reasoning. If false, give a counterexample. The values of the secant and tangent functions for any quadrantal angle are undefined. 53. Writing in Math Use the information on page 776 to explain how you can model the position of riders on a skycoaster. 54. ACT/SAT If the cotangent of angle is 1, then the tangent of angle is 55. REVIEW Which angle has a tangent and cosine that are both negative? A -1. C 1. F 110° H 210° B 0. D 3. G 180° J 340° Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. (Lesson 13-2) 5 57. _ 56. 90° 58. 5 3 59. LITERATURE In one of Grimm’s Fairy Tales, Rumpelstiltskin has the ability to spin straw into gold. Suppose on the first day, he spun 5 pieces of straw into gold, and each day thereafter he spun twice as much. How many pieces of straw would he have spun into gold by the end of the week? (Lesson 11-4) Use Cramer’s Rule to solve each system of equations. (Lesson 4-6) 60. 3x – 4y 13 –2x 5y –4 61. 5x 7y 1 3x 5y 3 62. 2x 3y –2 –6x y –34 PREREQUISITE SKILL Solve each equation. Round to the nearest tenth. (Lesson 13-1) 8 a 63. _ =_ sin 32° sin 65° 21 b 64. _ =_ sin 45° sin 100° 3 c 65. _ =_ sin 60° sin 75° Lesson 13-3 Trigonometric Functions of General Angles 783 CH APTER 13 Mid-Chapter Quiz Lessons 13-1 through 13-3 Solve ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. (Lesson 13-1) 3 B c A SUNDIAL For Exercises 12 and 13, use the following information. (Lesson 13-2) A sector is a region of a circle that is bounded by a central angle θ and its intercepted arc. The area A of a sector with radius r and central angle θ is given by a b Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. (Lesson 13-2) 11π 10. -55° 11. _ C 1 2 r θ, where θ is measured in radians. A=_ 1. A = 48°, b 12 2. a = 18, c = 21 2 3. Draw an angle measuring -60° in standard position. (Lesson 13-1) 4. Find the values of the six trigonometric functions for angle θ in the triangle at the right. (Lesson 13-1) 7 q 5. TRUCKS The tailgate of a moving truck is 2 feet above the ground. The incline of the ramp used for loading the truck is 15° as shown. Find the length of the ramp to the nearest tenth of a foot. (Lesson 13-1) ÌÊ`À>ÜÊÌÊÃV>i® £x ÓÊvÌ Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. (Lesson 13-2) 6. 190° 7. 450° 7π 8. _ 6 11π 9. -_ 5 784 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 12. Find the shaded area of a sundial with a 3π central angle of _ radians and a radius that 4 measures 6 inches. 13. Find the sunny area of a sundial with a central angle of 270° with a radius measuring 10 inches. 14. Find the exact value of the six trigonometric functions of θ if the terminal side of θ in standard position contains the point (-2, 3). (Lesson 13-3) 5π . (Lesson 13-3) 15. Find the exact value of csc _ 3 16. NAVIGATION Airplanes and ships measure distance in nautical miles. The formula 1 nautical mile = 6077 - 31 cos 2θ feet, where θ is the latitude in degrees, can be used to find the approximate length of a nautical mile at a certain latitude. Find the length of a nautical mile where the latitude is 120°. (Lesson 13-3) 17. MULTIPLE CHOICE Suppose θ is an angle in standard position with sin θ > 0. In which quadrant(s) does the terminal side of θ lie? (Lesson 13-3) A I C III B II D I and II 13-4 Law of Sines Main Ideas • Solve problems by using the Law of Sines. You know how to find the area of a triangle when the base and the height are known. Using this formula, the area of 䉭ABC below is _1 ch. If the height h of this triangle were not known, you could still • Determine whether a triangle has one, two, or no solutions. find the area given the measures of angle A and the length of side b. Trigonometry Standard 13.0 Students know the law of sines and the law of cosines and apply those laws to solve problems. (Key) Trigonometry Standard 14.0 Students determine the area of a triangle, given one angle and the two adjacent sides. (Key) 2 h → h = b sin A sin A = _ C b By combining this equation with the area formula, you can find a new formula for the area of the triangle. b 1 1 Area = _ ch → Area = _ c(b sin A) 2 A 2 a h B c Law of Sines You can find two other formulas for the area of the triangle above in a similar way. New Vocabulary Area of a Triangle Law of Sines Words Area Formulas The area of a triangle is one half the product of the lengths of two sides and the sine of their included angle. C a b 1 Symbols area = _ bc sin A 2 These formulas allow you to find the area of any triangle when you know the measures of two sides and the included angle. 1 area = _ac sin B 2 c A 1 area = _ab sin C B 2 EXAMPLE Find the Area of a Triangle Find the area of ABC to the nearest tenth. A In this triangle, a = 5, c = 6, and B = 112°. Choose the second formula because you know the values of its variables. 1 Area = _ ac sin B 1. 6 ft 2 1 _ = (5)(6) sin 112° 2 Area formula Replace a with 5, c with 6, and B with 112º. ≈ 13.9 To the nearest tenth, the area is 13.9 square feet. 112˚ B C 5 ft Find the area of ABC to the nearest tenth if A = 31°, b = 18 m, and c = 22 m. Lesson 13-4 Law of Sines 785 All of the area formulas for ABC represent the area of the same triangle. 1 1 1 bc sin A, _ ac sin B, and _ ab sin C are all equal. You can use this fact to So, _ 2 2 2 derive the Law of Sines. _1 bc sin A = _1 ac sin B = _1 ab sin C 2 2 2 _1 _1 _1 bc sin A ac sin B ab sin C 2 2 2 _ =_ =_ _1 abc 2 _1 abc _1 abc = a sin B _ = sin C _ Divide each expression by _abc. 1 2 2 2 sin A _ Set area formulas equal to each other. Simplify. c b Law of Sines Alternate Representations The Law of Sines may also be written as Let ABC be any triangle with a, b, and c representing the measures of sides opposite angles with measurements A, B, and C respectively. Then, sin B a b sin C sin B _ sin A _ _ = = . a c a b _ =_ = _. sin A C c b sin C c A B The Law of Sines can be used to write three different equations. sin A sin B _ =_ a or b sin B sin C _ =_ b sin A sin C _ =_ or c a c In Lesson 13-1, you learned how to solve right triangles. To solve any triangle, you can apply the Law of Sines if you know • the measures of two angles and any side or • the measures of two sides and the angle opposite one of them. EXAMPLE Solve a Triangle Given Two Angles and a Side Solve ABC. C You are given the measures of two angles and a side. First, find the measure of the third angle. 45° 55° B = 180° B = 80° 55˚ b The sum of the angle measures of a triangle is 180°. 180 - (45 + 55) = 80 A a 45˚ 12 Now use the Law of Sines to find a and b. Write two equations, each with one variable. sin A sin C _ =_ Law of Sines sin 45° sin 55° _ =_ Replace A with 45°, B with 80°, C with 55°, and c with 12. a a c 12 12 sin 45° a=_ sin 55° a ≈ 10.4 Solve for the variable. Use a calculator. Therefore, B = 80°, a ≈ 10.4, and b ≈ 14.4. 786 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions sin B sin C _ =_ c b sin 80° sin 55° _ =_ 12 b 12 sin 80° b= _ sin 55° b ≈ 14.4 B 2. Solve FGH if m∠G = 80°, m∠H = 40°, and g = 14. One, Two, or No Solutions When solving a triangle, you must analyze the data you are given to determine whether there is a solution. For example, if you are given the measures of two angles and a side, as in Example 2, the triangle has a unique solution. However, if you are given the measures of two sides and the angle opposite one of them, a single solution may not exist. One of the following will be true. • No triangle exists, and there is no solution. • Exactly one triangle exists, and there is one solution. • Two triangles exist, and there are two solutions. Possible Triangles Given Two Sides and One Opposite Angle Suppose you are given a, b, and A for a triangle. A Is Acute (A < 90°). A Is Right or Obtuse (A ≥ 90°). a a b b a b sin A b b sin A A A A a < b sin A no solution a = b sin A one solution b sin A b sin A b a a≤b no solution a b a A a b A A b > a > b sin A two solutions a≥b one solution EXAMPLE a>b one solution One Solution In ABC, A = 118°, a = 20, and b = 17. Determine whether ABC has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve ABC. Because angle A is obtuse and a b, you know that one solution exists. Use the Law of Sines to find B. sin B sin 118° _ =_ Law of Sines Use the Law of Sines again to find c. 17 sin 118° sin B = _ Multiply each side by 17. sin 13 sin 118° _ =_ sin B ≈ 0.7505 Use a calculator. 20 17 20 B ≈ 49° Use the sin-1 function. c 20 Law of Sines 20 sin 13° c=_ or about 5.1 sin 118° Therefore, B ≈ 49°, C ≈ 13°, and c ≈ 5.1. The measure of angle C is approximately 180 (118 49) or 13°. Extra Examples at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-4 Law of Sines 787 3. In ABC, B = 95°, b = 19, and c = 12. Determine whether ABC has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve ABC. EXAMPLE No Solution In ABC, A = 50°, a = 5, and b = 9. Determine whether ABC has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve ABC. Since angle A is acute, find b sin A and compare it with a. C 5 b sin A = 9 sin 50° Replace b with 9 and A with 50°. A Is Acute ≈ 6. 9 We compare b sin A to a because b sin A is the minimum distance from C to AB when A is acute. 9 Use a calculator. Since 5 6.9, there is no solution. 4. A b sin A 6.9 50˚ B In ABC, B = 95°, b = 10, and c = 12. Determine whether ABC has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve ABC. When two solutions for a triangle exist, it is called the ambiguous case. EXAMPLE Alternate Method Another way to find the obtuse angle in Case 2 of Example 5 is to notice in the figure below that 䉭CBB’ is isosceles. Since the base angles of an isosceles triangle are always congruent and m⬔B’ = 62°, m⬔CBB’ = 62°. Also, ⬔ABC and m⬔CBB’ are supplementary. Therefore, m⬔ABC = 180° 62° or 118°. Two Solutions In ABC, A = 39°, a = 10, and b = 14. Determine whether ABC has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve ABC. Since angle A is acute, find b sin A and compare it with a. b sin A = 14 sin 39° Replace b with 14 and A with 39°. ≈ 8.81 Use a calculator. Since 14 10 8.81, there are two solutions. Thus, there are two possible triangles to be solved. Case 1 Acute Angle B Case 2 Obtuse Angle B C C C 14 14 10 10 10 A 118˚ 62˚ B 10 62˚ 39˚ c A B' B First, use the Law of Sines to find B. sin B sin 39° _ =_ 14 10 14 sin 39° sin B = _ 10 sin B = 0.8810 B ≈ 62° 788 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions A 39˚ c B To find B, you need to find an obtuse angle whose sine is also 0.8810. To do this, subtract the angle given by your calculator, 62°, from 180°. So B is approximately 180 62 or 118°. The measure of angle C is approximately 180 (39 118) or 23°. The measure of angle C is approximately 180 ⫺ (39 ⫹ 62) or 79°. Use the Law of Sines to find c. sin 23° sin 39° _ =_ c sin 79° sin 39° _ =_ c 10 10 sin 79° _ c= sin 39° 10 10 sin 23° c=_ sin 39° c ≈ 6.2 c ≈ 15.6 Therefore, B ≈ 118°, C ≈ 23°, and c ≈ 6.2. Therefore, B ≈ 62°, C ≈ 79°, and c ≈ 15.6. 5. In ABC, A = 44°, b = 19, and a = 14. Determine whether ABC has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve ABC. two; B ≈ 71°, C ≈ 65°, c ≈ 18.3; B ≈ 109°, C ≈ 27°, c ≈ 9.1 Use the Law of Sines to Solve a Problem Real-World Link Standing 208 feet tall, the Cape Hatteras Lighthouse in North Carolina is the tallest lighthouse in the United States. Source: www.oldcapehatteras lighthouse.com LIGHTHOUSES The light on a lighthouse revolves counterclockwise at a steady rate of one revolution per minute. The beam strikes a point on the shore that is 2000 feet from the lighthouse. Three seconds later, the light strikes a point 750 feet further down the shore. To the nearest foot, how far is the lighthouse from the shore? A lighthouse 18˚ 2000 ft d Because the lighthouse makes one revolution every 60 seconds, the angle through which the light ␣ B 3 (360°) or 18°. revolves in 3 seconds is _ shore 60 C D 750 ft Use the Law of Sines to find the measure of angle α. sin 18° sin α _ =_ Law of Sines 2000 sin 18° sin α = _ Multiply each side by 2000. sin α ≈ 0.8240 Use a calculator. 2000 750 750 Use the sin-1 function. α ≈ 55° Use this angle measure to find the measure of angle θ. α ⫹ m⬔BAC = 90° 55° ⫹ (θ ⫹ 18°) ≈ 90° θ ≈ 17° Angles α and ∠BAC are complementary. α < 55° and m∠BAC = θ + 18° Solve for θ. To find the distance from the lighthouse to the shore, solve 䉭ABD for d. AB cos θ = _ AD d cos 17° ≈ _ 2000 Cosine ratio θ = 17° and AD = 2000 d ≈ 2000 cos 17° Solve for d. d ≈ 1913 Use a calculator. To the nearest foot, it is 1913 feet from the lighthouse to the shore. Lesson 13-4 Law of Sines Peter Miller/Photo Researchers 789 6. The beam of light from another lighthouse strikes the shore 3000 feet away. Three seconds later, the beam strikes 1200 feet farther down the shore. To the nearest foot, how far is this lighthouse from the shore? Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Example 1 (p. 785) Find the area of ABC to the nearest tenth. 1. 2. B A 10 in. 50˚ A Example 2 (pp. 786–787) 3 cm 135˚ B 6 cm C C 15 in. Solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 3. C B 4. 5. B C 140˚ 14 3 25˚ 80˚ B 20 38 75˚ C A A 70˚ A Examples 3–5 (pp. 787–789) Example 6 (p. 789) HOMEWORK HELP For See Exercises Examples 11–16 1 17–30 2–5 31, 32 6 Determine whether each triangle has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 6. A = 123°, a = 12, b = 23 7. A = 30°, a = 3, b = 4 8. A = 55°, a = 10, b = 5 9. A = 145°, a = 18, b = 10 10. WOODWORKING Latisha is to join a 6-meter beam to a 7-meter beam so the angle opposite the 7-meter beam measures 75°. To what length should Latisha cut the third beam in order to form a triangular brace? Round to the nearest tenth. 7m 6m 75˚ Find the area of ABC to the nearest tenth. 11. C 12. A 8 yd 12 m 127˚ A 9m B B 7 yd 44˚ C 13. B = 85°, c = 23 ft, a = 50 ft 14. A = 60°, b = 12 cm, c = 12 cm 15. C = 136°, a = 3 m, b = 4 m 16. B = 32°, a = 11 mi, c = 5 mi 790 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 19. B ⬇ 21°, 17. C ⬇ 37°, b ⬇ 13.1 22. A ⬇ 40°, B ⬇ 65°, b ⬇ 2.8 18. B 1 C 62˚ 17˚ 19. A 59˚ A 48˚ C C 122˚ C = 73°, a ⬇ 55.6, b ⬇ 48.2 62 B = 101°, c ⬇ 3.0, b ⬇ 3.4 A 22 31 B B 20. B 5 C B ⬇ 46°, C ⬇ 69°, c ⬇ 5.1 21. B 65˚ 4 A 22. C 63˚ 20˚ 16 B 3 2 A C = 97°, a ⬇ 5.5, b ⬇ 14.4 C 75˚ A Determine whether each triangle has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 24–25. See margin. 23. 25. 27–30. See margin. 27. 29. A = 124°, a = 1, b = 2 no 24. A = 99°, a = 2.5, b = 1.5 A = 33°, a = 2, b = 3.5 26. A = 68°, a = 3, b = 5 no A = 30°, a = 14, b = 28 28. A = 61°, a = 23, b = 8 A = 52°, a = 190, b = 200 30. A = 80°, a = 9, b = 9.1 ★ 31. RADIO A radio station providing local Real-World Link Hot-air balloons range in size from approximately 54,000 cubic feet to over 250,000 cubic feet. Source: www.unicorn-ballon. com EXTRA PRACTICE See pages 921, 938. Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com tourist information has its transmitter on Beacon Road, 8 miles from where it Beacon Road intersects with the interstate highway. If 8 mi the radio station has a range of 5 miles, 5 mi 5 mi between what two distances from the 35˚ Interstate intersection can cars on the interstate tune in to hear this information? 4.6 and 8.5 mi ★ 32. FORESTRY Two forest rangers, 12 miles from each other on a straight service road, both sight an illegal bonfire away from the road. Using their radios to communicate with each other, they determine that the fire is between them. The first ranger’s line of sight to the fire makes an angle of 38° with the road, and the second ranger’s line of sight to the fire makes a 63° angle with the road. How far is the fire from each ranger? 7.5 mi from Ranger B, 10.9 mi from Ranger A Solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 33. A = 50°, a = 2.5, c = 3 C ⬇ 67°, B ⬇ 63°, b ⬇ 2.9 34. B = 18°, C = 142°, b = 20 A = 20°, a ⬇ 22.1, c ⬇ 39.8 35. BALLOONING As a hot-air balloon ★ crosses over a straight portion of interstate highway, its pilot eyes two consecutive mileposts on the same side of the balloon. When viewing the mileposts the angles of depression are 64° and 7°. How high is the balloon to the nearest foot? 690 ft Not drawn to scale 7˚ 2 64˚ 1 1 mi ⫽ 5280 ft Lesson 13-4 Law of Sines SuperStock 791 H.O.T. Problems 36. OPEN ENDED Give an example of a triangle that has two solutions by listing measures for A, a, and b, where a and b are in centimeters. Then draw both cases using a ruler and protractor. 37. FIND THE ERROR Dulce and Gabe are finding the area of 䉭ABC for A = 64°, a = 15 meters, and b = 8 meters using the sine function. Who is correct? Explain your reasoning. Dulce Gabe _ Area = 1 (15)(8)sin 64° _ Area = 1 (15)(8)sin 87.4° 2 2 ≈ 53.9 m2 ≈ 59.9 m2 38. REASONING Determine whether the following statement is sometimes, always or never true. Explain your reasoning. If given the measure of two sides of a triangle and the angle opposite one of them, you will be able to find a unique solution. 39. Writing in Math Use the information on page 785 to explain how trigonometry can be used to find the area of a triangle. 40. ACT/SAT Which of the following is the perimeter of the triangle shown? A 49.0 cm C 91.4 cm B 66.0 cm D 93.2 cm 36˚ 22 cm 41. REVIEW The longest side of a triangle is 67 inches. Two angles have measures of 47° and 55°. What is the length of the shortest leg of the triangle? F 50.1 in. H 60.1 in. G 56.1 in. J 62.3 in. Find the exact value of each trigonometric function. (Lesson 13-3) 42. cos 30° 43. cot _ (3) 44. csc _ (4) Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. (Lesson 13-2) 5 45. 300° 46. 47° 47. _ 3 48. AERONAUTICS A rocket rises 20 feet in the first second, 60 feet in the second second, and 100 feet in the third second. If it continues at this rate, how many feet will it rise in the 20th second? (Lesson 11-1) PREREQUISITE SKILL Solve each equation. Round to the nearest tenth. (Lesson 13-1) 49. a2 = 32 52 2(3)(5) cos 85° 50. c2 = 122 102 2(12)(10) cos 40° 51. 72 = 112 92 2(11)(9) cos B° 52. 132 = 82 62 2(8)(6) cos A° 792 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 13-5 Law of Cosines Main Ideas A satellite in a geosynchronous orbit about Earth appears to remain stationary over one point on the equator. A receiving dish for the satellite can be directed at one spot in the sky. The satellite orbits 35,786 kilometers above the equator at 87°W longitude. The city of Valparaiso, Indiana, is located at approximately 87°W longitude and 41.5°N latitude. • Solve problems by using the Law of Cosines. • Determine whether a triangle can be solved by first using the Law of Sines or the Law of Cosines. Trigonometry Standard 13.0 Students know the law of sines and the law of cosines and apply those laws to solve problems. (Key) 6375 km 41.5˚ 6375 km 35,786 km New Vocabulary Law of Cosines If the radius of Earth is about 6375 kilometers, you can use trigonometry to determine the angle at which to direct the receiver. Law of Cosines Problems such as this, in which you know the measures of two sides and the included angle of a triangle, cannot be solved using the Law of Sines. You can solve problems such as this by using the Law of Cosines. To derive the Law of Cosines, consider 䉭ABC. What relationship exists between a, b, c, and A? B c a2 (b x)2 h2 Use the Pythagorean Theorem for DBC. A b2 2bx x2 h2 Expand (b - x)2. b2 2bx c2 In ADB, c2 = x2 + h2. a h x C bx D b b2 2b(c cos A) c2 cos A = _xc , so x = c cos A. b2 c2 2bc cos A You can apply the Law of Cosines to a triangle if you know the measures of two sides and the included angle, or the measures of three sides. Commutative Property Law of Cosines Let ABC be any triangle with a, b, and c representing the measures of sides, and opposite angles with measures A, B, and C, respectively. Then the following equations are true. a2 = b2 + c2 - 2bc cos A b2 = a2 + c2 - 2ac cos B A B c a b C c2 = a2 + b2 - 2ab cos C Lesson 13-5 Law of Cosines 793 EXAMPLE Solve a Triangle Given Two Sides and Included Angle Solve ABC. c A B Begin by using the Law of Cosines to determine c. c2 a2 b2 2ab cos C Law of Cosines c2 182 242 2(18)(24) cos 57° a = 18, b = 24, and C = 57° c2 429.4 Simplify using a calculator. c 20.7 24 18 57˚ C Take the square root of each side. Next, you can use the Law of Sines to find the measure of angle A. Alternative Method After finding the measure of c in Example 1, the Law of Cosines could be used again to find a second angle. sin A sin C _ _ Law of Sines sin A sin 57° _ _ a = 18, C = 57°, and c < 20.7 a c 20.7 18 sin 57° sin A _ 20.7 18 Multiply each side by 18. sin A 0.7293 Use a calculator. A 47° Use the sin-1 function. The measure of angle B is approximately 180° (57° 47°) or 76°. Therefore, c 20.7, A 47°, and B 76°. 1. Solve FGH if m∠G = 82°, f = 6, and h = 4. EXAMPLE Solve a Triangle Given Three Sides B Solve ABC. Use the Law of Cosines to find the measure of the largest angle first, angle A. a2 b2 c2 2bc cos A 7 15 A Law of Cosines 152 92 72 2(9)(7) cos A a = 15, b = 9, and c = 7 152 92 72 2(9)(7) cos A 2 92 72 5_ cos A –2(9)(7) 0.7540 cos A 139° A Subtract 92 and 72 from each side. Divide each side by -2(9)(7). Use a calculator. Use the cos-1 function. You can use the Law of Sines to find the measure of angle B. sin A sin B _ _ a b sin 139° sin B _ _ 15 9 9 sin 139° sin B _ 15 Law of Sines sin B 0.3936 Use a calculator. B 23° b = 9, A ≈ 139°, and a = 15 Multiply each side by 9. Use the sin-1 function. The measure of angle C is approximately 180° (139° 23°) or 18°. Therefore, A 139°, B 23°, and C 18°. 794 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 9 C Sides and Angles When solving triangles, remember that the angle with the greatest measure is always opposite the longest side. The angle with the least measure is always opposite the shortest side. 2. Solve FGH if f ⫽ 2, g ⫽ 11, and h ⫽ 1. F ≈ 9°, G ≈ 115°, H ≈ 56° Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Choose the Method To solve a triangle that is oblique, or having no right angle, you need to know the measure of at least one side and any two other parts. If the triangle has a solution, then you must decide whether to begin solving by using the Law of Sines or the Law of Cosines. Use the chart to help you choose. Solving an Oblique Triangle Given Begin by Using two angles and any side Law of Sines two sides and an angle opposite one of them Law of Sines two sides and their included angle Law of Cosines three sides Law of Cosines Apply the Law of Cosines Real-World Link Medical evacuation (Medevac) helicopters provide quick transportation from areas that are difficult to reach by any other means. These helicopters can cover long distances and are primary emergency vehicles in locations where there are few hospitals. Source: The Helicopter Education Center EMERGENCY MEDICINE A medical rescue helicopter has flown from its home base at point C to pick up an accident victim at point A and then from there to the hospital at point B. The pilot needs to know how far he is now from his home base so he can decide whether to refuel before returning. How far is the hospital from the helicopter’s base? B 45 mi A 130˚ a 50 mi You are given the measures of two sides and their included angle, so use the Law of Cosines to find a. a2 ⫽ b2 ⫹ c2 ⫺ 2bc cos A Law of Cosines b = 50, c = 45, a2 ⫽ 502 ⫹ 452 ⫺ 2(50)(45) cos 130° and A = 130°. a2 7417.5 Use a calculator to simplify. a 86.1 Take the square root of each side. C The distance between the hospital and the helicopter base is approximately 86.1 miles. 3. As part of training to run a marathon, Amelia ran 6 miles in one direction. She then turned and ran another 9 miles. The two legs of her run formed an angle of 79°. How far was Amelia from her starting point at the end of the 9-mile leg of her run? about 9.8 mi Extra Examples at ca.algebra2.com Roy Ooms/Masterfile Lesson 13-5 Law of Cosines 795 Examples 1, 2 (pp. 794–795) Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 1. 2. B B 11 14 35˚ A 10.5 C 3. A 42°, b 57, a 63 Example 3 (p. 795) 40˚ A 70˚ C 4. a 5, b 12, c 13 BASEBALL For Exercises 5 and 6, use the following information. In Australian baseball, the bases lie at the vertices of a square 27.5 meters on a side and the pitcher’s mound is 18 meters from home plate. 5. Find the distance from the pitcher’s mound to first base. 6. Find the angle between home plate, the pitcher’s mound, and first base. 27.5 m B P 18 m 27.5 m H HOMEWORK HELP For See Exercises Examples 7–18 1, 2 19, 20 3 Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 7. 8. 9. B C A 18 A 15 166 140 19 B 72˚ 48˚ 13 10. A B C 11. C A 15 B 71˚ 11 12 34˚ 12. B B A 42˚ 17 C 185 C 29˚ A 13. a 20, c 24, B 47° 14. a 345, b 648, c 442 15. A 36°, a 10 , b 19 16. A 25°, B 78°, a 13.7 17. a 21.5, b 16.7, c 10.3 18. a 16, b 24, c 41 A 19. GEOMETRY In rhombus ABCD, the measure of ⬔ADC is 52°. Find the measures of diagonals A C −− and BD to the nearest tenth. 796 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 5 cm 5 cm D C 10.5 B 5 cm 5 cm C ★ 20. SURVEYING Two sides of a triangular plot of land have lengths of 425 feet and 550 feet. The measure of the angle between those sides is 44.5°. Find the perimeter and area of the plot. about 1362 ft; about 81,919 ft2 21–26. See Ch. 13 Answer Appendix. Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 22. B ⫽ 19°, a ⫽ 51, c ⫽ 61 21. a ⫽ 8, b ⫽ 24, c ⫽ 18 Real-World Link At digs such as the one at the Glen Rose formation in Texas, anthropologists study the footprints made by dinosaurs millions of years ago. Locomoter parameters, such as pace and stride, taken from these prints can be used to describe how a dinosaur once moved. Source: Mid-America Paleontology Society EXTRA 23. A ⫽ 56°, B ⫽ 22°, a ⫽ 12.2 24. a ⫽ 4, b ⫽ 8, c ⫽ 5 25. a ⫽ 21.5, b ⫽ 13, C ⫽ 38° 26. A ⫽ 40°, b ⫽ 7, a ⫽ 6 DINOSAURS For Exercises 27–29, use the diagram at the right. ★ 27. An anthropologist examining the footprints made by a bipedal (two-footed) dinosaur finds that the dinosaur’s average pace was about 1.60 meters and average stride was about 3.15 meters. Find the step angle for this dinosaur. about 159.7° ★ 28. Find the step angle made by the hindfeet of a herbivorous dinosaur whose pace averages about 1.78 meters and stride averages 2.73 meters. 100.1° ★ 29. An efficient walker has a step angle that approaches 180°, meaning that the animal minimizes “zig-zag” motion while maximizing forward motion. What can you tell about the motion of each dinosaur from its step angle? See margin. PRACTICE See pages 921, 938. Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com H.O.T. Problems 30. AVIATION A pilot typically flies a route from Los Alamos to King City, covering a distance of 112 miles. In order to avoid a storm, the pilot first flies from Los Alamos to Maricopa, a distance of 54 miles, then turns the plane and flies 126 miles on to King City. Through what angle did the pilot turn the plane over Maricopa? about 62.67° pace stride step angle pace King City CA MI MI Maricopa MI Los Alamos 31. REASONING Explain how to solve a triangle by using the Law of Cosines if the lengths of See Ch. 13 Answer Appendix. a. three sides are known. b. two sides and the measure of the angle between them are known. 32. Mateo; the angle given is not between the two sides; therefore the Law of Sines should be used. B 32. FIND THE ERROR Mateo and Amy are deciding which method, the Law of Sines or the Law of Cosines, should be used first to solve 䉭ABC. 22 23 A Mateo Amy Begin by using the Law of Sines, since you are given two sides and an angle opposite one of them. Begin by using the Law of Cosines, since you are given two sides and their included angle. 30˚ C Who is correct? Explain your reasoning. Lesson 13-5 Law of Cosines John T. Carbone/Photonica 797 33. OPEN ENDED Give an example of a triangle that can be solved by first using the Law of Cosines. 34. CHALLENGE Explain how the Pythagorean Theorem is a special case of the Law of Cosines. 35. Writing in Math Use the information on page 793 to explain how you can determine the angle at which to install a satellite dish. Include an explanation of how, given the latitude of a point on Earth’s surface, you can determine the angle at which to install a satellite dish at the same longitude. 36. ACT/SAT In 䉭DEF, what is the value of to the nearest degree? D 11 115 E 5 37. REVIEW Two trucks, A and B, start from the intersection C of two straight roads at the same time. Truck A is traveling twice as fast as truck B and after 4 hours, the two trucks are 350 miles apart. Find the approximate speed of truck B in miles per hour. F A 350 mi A 26° B B 74° 100˚ C 80° C D 141° F 35 G 37 H 57 J 73 38. SANDBOX Mr. Blackwell is building a triangular sandbox. He is to join a 3-meter beam to a 4 meter beam so the angle opposite the 4-meter beam measures 80°. To what length should Mr. Blackwell cut the third beam in order to form the triangular sandbox? Round to the nearest tenth. (Lesson 13-4) Find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of if the terminal side of in standard position contains the given point. (Lesson 13-3) 39. (5, 12) 40. (4, 7) 41. ( √ 10 , √ 6) Solve each equation or inequality. (Lesson 9-5) 42. ex + 5 = 9 43. 4ex - 3 > -1 44. ln (x + 3) = 2 PREREQUISITE SKILL Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. (Lesson 13-2) 45. 45° 46. 30° 47. 180° 48. _ 7 49. _ 4 50. _ 2 798 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 6 3 13-6 Circular Functions Main Ideas • Find the exact values of trigonometric functions of angles. Trigonometry Standard 2.0 Students know the definition of sine and cosine as y- and x-coordinates of points on the unit circle and are familiar with the graphs of the sine and cosine functions. Trigonometry Standard 7.0 Students know that the tangent of the angle that a line makes with the x-axis is equal to the slope of the line. (Key) New Vocabulary circular function periodic period The average high temperatures, in degrees Fahrenheit, for Barrow, Alaska, are given in the table at the right. With January assigned a value of 1, February a value of 2, March a value of 3, and so on, these data can be graphed as shown below. This pattern of temperature fluctuations repeats after a period of 12 months. High Temperature (°F) • Define and use the trigonometric functions based on the unit circle. BARROW, ALASKA Jan Feb March April May June July Aug Sept Oct Nov Dec y 40 30 20 10 0 x ⫺10 HIGH TEMP. (°F) -7.4 -11.8 -9.0 4.7 24.2 38.3 45.0 42.3 33.8 18.1 3.5 -5.2 MONTH Source: www.met.utah.edu 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Month Unit Circle Definitions From your work (0, 1) with reference angles, you know that the values of trigonometric functions also repeat. For example, sin 30° and sin 150° 1 have the same value, _ . In this lesson, we 2 will further generalize the functions by defining them in terms of the unit circle. y P (x, y) 1 y O (⫺1, 0) x (1, 0) x 0, ⫺1 Consider an angle θ in standard position. The terminal side of the angle intersects y the unit circle at a unique point, P(x, y). Recall that sin θ _r x and cos θ _ r . Since P(x, y) is on the unit circle, r 1. Therefore, sin θ y and cos θ x. ( ) Definition of Sine and Cosine Words If the terminal side of an angle θ in standard position intersects the unit circle at P(x, y), then cos θ x and sin θ y . Therefore, the coordinates of P can be written as P(cos θ, sin θ). Model (0, 1) y P (cos , sin ) (1, 0) x (⫺1, 0) O (0, ⫺1) Lesson 13-6 Circular Functions 799 Since there is exactly one point P(x, y) for any angle θ, the relations cos θ = x and sin θ = y are functions of . Because they are both defined using a unit circle, they are often called circular functions. Remembering Relationships To help you remember that x = cos θ and y = sin θ, notice that alphabetically x comes before y and cosine comes before sine. EXAMPLE Find Sine and Cosine Given Point on Unit Circle y Given an angle θ in standard position, if ( ) 2 √2 1 lies on the terminal side and P _, – _ 3 3 on the unit circle, find sin θ and cos θ. x O ( ) 2 √2 1 P(cos θ, sin θ), P _ , –_ 3 3 2 √2 _ _1 so sin θ and cos θ 3 3 P ( 2兹2 , ⫺1 3 3 . ( √ 19 6 √ ) 1. Given an angle θ in standard position, if P _, _ lies on the terminal 5 5 side and on the unit circle, find sin θ and cos θ. GRAPHING CALCULATOR LAB Sine and Cosine on the Unit Circle Press MODE and highlight Degree and Par. Then use the following range values to set up a viewing window: TMIN = 0, TMAX = 360, TSTEP = 15, XMIN = -2.4, XMAX = 2.35, XSCL = 0.5, YMIN = -1.5, YMAX = 1.55, YSCL = 0.5. Press Y = to define the unit circle with X1T = cos T and Y1T = sin T. Press GRAPH . Use the TRACE function to move around the circle. THINK AND DISCUSS 1. What does T represent? What do the x- and y-values represent? 2. Determine the sine and cosine of the angles whose terminal sides lie at 0°, 90°, 180°, and 270°. 3. How do the values of sine change as you move around the unit circle? How do the values of cosine change? The exact values of the sine and cosine functions for specific angles are summarized using the definition of sine and cosine on the unit circle at the right. y (⫺ 12 , 兹3 2 ) 兹2 , 2 ) (⫺ 兹2 2 120˚ 135˚ , 1) (⫺ 兹3 2 2 (0, 1) 90˚ 150˚ (⫺1, 0) 180˚ 210˚ 30˚ O 225˚ ,⫺1) (⫺ 兹3 2 2 240˚ 兹2 , ⫺ 270˚ (⫺ 兹2 ) 2 2 1 兹3 (⫺ 2 , ⫺ 2 ) (0, ⫺1) 800 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions ( 12 , 兹3 2 ) , 兹2 ) ( 兹2 2 2 60˚ 45˚ , 1) ( 兹3 2 2 0˚ 360˚ 330˚ 315˚ 300˚ (1, 0) x ,⫺1 ) ( 兹3 2 2 兹2 兹2 ( 2 ,⫺ 2 ) 1 ( 2 , ⫺ 兹3 2 ) ) This same information is presented on the graphs of the sine and cosine functions below, where the horizontal axis shows the values of θ and the vertical axis shows the values of sin θ or cos θ. y O y y ⫽ sin 1 90˚ 180˚ 270˚ 1 360˚ O ⫺1 y ⫽ cos 90˚ 180˚ 270˚ 360˚ ⫺1 Periodic Functions Notice in the graph above that the values of sine for the coterminal angles 0° and 360° are both 0. The values of cosine for these angles are both 1. Every 360° or 2 radians, the sine and cosine functions repeat their values. So, we can say that the sine and cosine functions are periodic, each having a period of 360° or 2 radians. y y y ⫽ sin 1 90˚ 180˚ 270˚ 360˚ 450˚ 540˚ O ⫺1 1 y ⫽ cos O 90˚ 180˚ 270˚ 360˚ 450˚ 540˚ ⫺1 Periodic Function A function is called periodic if there is a number a such that f(x) = f(x + a) for all x in the domain of the function. The least positive value of a for which f(x) = f(x + a) is called the period of the function. For the sine and cosine functions, cos (x 360°) cos x, and sin (x 360°) sin x. In radian measure, cos (x 2π) cos x, and sin (x 2π) sin x. Therefore, the period of the sine and cosine functions is 360° or 2π. EXAMPLE Find the Value of a Trigonometric Function Find the exact value of each function. ( _6 ) 5π 5π sin (-_ = sin (-_ + 2π) 6 ) 6 b. sin - 5π a. cos 675° cos 675° = cos (315° + 360°) = cos 315° 7π = sin _ √2 =_ 1 = -_ 2 3π 2A. cos -_ ( 4 ) 6 2 2B. sin 420° Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Extra Examples at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-6 Circular Functions 801 When you look at the graph of a periodic function, you will see a repeating pattern: a shape that repeats over and over as you move to the right on the x-axis. The period is the distance along the x-axis from the beginning of the pattern to the point at which it begins again. Many real-world situations have characteristics that can be described with periodic functions. Find the Value of a Trigonometric Function FERRIS WHEEL As you ride a Ferris wheel, the height that you are above the ground varies periodically as a function of time. Consider the height of the center of the wheel to be the starting point. A particular wheel has a diameter of 38 feet and travels at a rate of 4 revolutions per minute. a. Identify the period of this function. Since the wheel makes 4 complete counterclockwise rotations every minute, the period is the time it takes to complete one rotation, which 1 of a minute or 15 seconds. is _ 4 Real-World Link The Ferris Wheel was designed by bridge builder George W. Ferris in 1893. It was designed to be the landmark of the World’s Fair in Chicago in 1893. b. Make a graph in which the horizontal axis represents the time t in seconds and the vertical axis represents the height h in feet in relation to the starting point. Your height is 0 feet at the starting point. Since the diameter of the wheel 38 or 19 feet above the is 38 feet, the wheel reaches a maximum height of _ 2 starting point and a minimum of 19 feet below the starting point. h Source: National Academy of Sciences 19 O 15 30 45 60 t ⫺19 Because the period of the function is 15 seconds, the pattern of the graph repeats in intervals of 15 seconds on the x-axis. A new model of the Ferris wheel travels at a rate of 5 revolutions per minute and has a diameter of 44 feet. 3A. What is the period of this function? 12 seconds 3B. Graph the function. See Ch. 13 Answer Appendix. 802 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Bettman/CORBIS Example 1 (p. 800) Example 2 (p. 801) If the given point P is located on the unit circle, find sin θ and cos θ. (2 13 ) ( 13 ) √ 2 √ 2 2. P _, _ 5 12 , -_ 1. P _ 2 Find the exact value of each function. 10π 3. sin -240º 4. cos _ 3 Example 3 (p. 802) HOMEWORK HELP For See Exercises Examples 7–12 1 13–18 2 19–38 3 PHYSICS For Exercises 5 and 6, use the following information. The motion of a weight on a spring varies periodically as a function of time. Suppose you pull the weight down 3 inches from its equilibrium point and then release it. It bounces above the equilibrium point and then returns below the equilibrium point in 2 seconds. 5. Find the period of this function. 6. Graph the height of the spring as a function of time. equilibrium point 3 in. The given point P is located on the unit circle. Find sin θ and cos θ. 3 _ ,4 7. P -_ ( ) ( 8 _ 9. P _ , 15 5 12 8. P -_ , -_ ) 5 5 √3 1 10. P _, -_ 2 2 ( 13 ( 2 13 √ 3 2 ( 17 17 ) ) ) 1 _ 11. P -_ , 12. P(0.6, 0.8) Find the exact value of each function. 13. sin 690º 14. cos 750º 14π 16. sin _ 6 15. cos 5π 3π 17. sin (-_ 2 ) ( ) 18. cos (-225º) Determine the period of each function. y 19. O 20. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 y 1 O 21. 3 6 9 12 15 18 21 24 27 30 33 36 39 42 45 48 51 54 x y 1 O ⫺1 2 3 4 5 Lesson 13-6 Circular Functions 803 Determine the period of the function. y 22. O Real-World Link Most guitars have six strings. The frequency at which one of these strings vibrates is controlled by the length of the string, the amount of tension on the string, the weight of the string, and the springiness of the strings’ material. Source: www.howstuffworks.com 2 4 6 8 10 12 8 14 16 18 x GUITAR For Exercises 23 and 24, use the following information. When a guitar string is plucked, it is displaced from a fixed point in the middle of the string and vibrates back and forth, producing a musical tone. The exact tone depends on the frequency, or number of cycles per second, that the string vibrates. To produce an A, the frequency is 440 cycles per second, or 440 hertz. 1 s 23. Find the period of this function. _ 440 24. Graph the height of the fixed point on the string from its resting position as a function of time. Let the maximum distance above the resting position have a value of 1 unit and the minimum distance below this position have a value of 1 unit. See Ch. 13 Answer Appendix. Find the exact value of each function. cos 60° + sin 30° 1 25. __ _ 9 26. 3(sin 60º)(cos 30º) _ 29. 12(sin 150º)(cos 150º) 3 √ 3 30. (sin 30º)2 + (cos 30º)2 1 4 4 1 √ 3 27. sin 30º - sin 60º _ 2 4 4 cos 330° + 2 sin 60° 28. __ √ 3 3 y ( ) √ 3 1, _ 31. _ , 2 ( 2 ★ 31. GEOMETRY A regular hexagon is inscribed in a ) √3 1, _ -_ , 2 2 (-1, 0), ( EXTRA (1, 0) x O ★ 32. BIOLOGY In a certain area of forested land, the ) √ 3 1 , -_ -_ , 2 2 √3 _1 , -_ 2 2 ( unit circle centered at the origin. If one vertex of the hexagon is at (1, 0), find the exact coordinates of the remaining vertices. ) PRACTICE See pages 921, 938. Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com population of rabbits R increases and decreases periodically throughout the year. If the population π (d - 60) , where d represents the dth can be modeled by R = 425 + 200 sin _ 365 day of the year, describe what happens to the population throughout the year. See Ch. 13 Answer Appendix. SLOPE For Exercises 33–38, use the following information. Suppose the terminal side of an angle in standard position intersects the unit circle at P(x, y). −− y 33. What is the slope of OP? _ x −− 34. Which of the six trigonometric functions is equal to the slope of OP? tan −− x 35. What is the slope of any line perpendicular to OP? -_ y 36. Which of the six trigonometric functions is equal to the slope of any line −− perpendicular to OP? -cot −− 37. Find the slope of OP when 60°. 兹3 苶 √ 3 38. If = 60°, find the slope of the line tangent to circle O at point P. -_ 3 804 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions CORBIS H.O.T. Problems 39. OPEN ENDED Give an example of a situation that could be described by a periodic function. Then state the period of the function. 40. WHICH ONE DOESN’T BELONG? Identify the expression that does not belong with the other three. Explain your reasoning. π tan _ sin 90° cos 180° 4 _ π csc 2 41. CHALLENGE Determine the domain and range of the functions y = sin θ and y = cos θ. 42. Writing in Math If the formula for the temperature T in degrees π Fahrenheit of a city t months into the year is given by T = 50 + 25 sin _ t , 6 explain how to find the average temperature and the maximum and minimum predicted over the year. ( ) 43. ACT/SAT If ABC is an equilateral −−− triangle, what is the length of AD, in units? 44. REVIEW For which measure of θ is √3 3 θ = _? A F 135° A 5 2 B 5 √ 45˚ G 270° D H 1080° C 10 B 2 D 10 √ 5 J 1830° C Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. (Lesson 13-5) A 45. 46. A 15 9 8 C 45˚ 17 B C 5 B Find the area of ABC. Round to the nearest tenth. (Lesson 13-4) 47. a = 11 in., c = 5 in., B = 79° 48. b = 4 m, c = 7 m, A = 63° 48. BULBS The lifetimes of 10,000 light bulbs are normally distributed. The mean lifetime is 300 days, and the standard deviation is 40 days. How many light bulbs will last between 260 and 340 days? (Lesson 12-7) Find the sum of each infinite geometric series, if it exists. (Lesson 11-5) 49. a1 = 3, r = 1.2 1 50. 16, 4, 1, _ ,… 4 ∞ 51. ∑ 13(-0.625)n - 1 n=1 PREREQUISITE SKILL Find each value of θ. Round to the nearest degree. (Lesson 13-1) 52. sin θ = 0.3420 53. cos θ = -0.3420 54. tan θ = 3.2709 Lesson 13-6 Circular Functions 805 13-7 Inverse Trigonometric Functions Main Ideas • Solve equations by using inverse trigonometric functions. • Find values of expressions involving trigonometric functions. Trigonometry Standard 8.0 Students know the definitions of the inverse trigonometric functions and can graph the functions. New Vocabulary principal values Arcsine function When a car travels a curve on a horizontal road, the friction between the tires and the road keeps the car on the road. Above a certain speed, however, the force of friction will not be great enough to hold the car in the curve. For this reason, civil engineers design banked curves. The proper banking angle for a car making a turn of radius r feet at a velocity v in feet per second is given by the equation v2 _ tan 32r . In order to determine the appropriate value of for a specific curve, you need to know the radius of the curve, the maximum allowable velocity of cars making the curve, and how to determine the angle given the value of its tangent. Arccosine function Arctangent function Solve Equations Using Inverses Sometimes the value of a trigonometric function for an angle is known and it is necessary to find the measure of the angle. The concept of inverse functions can be applied to find the inverse of trigonometric functions. In Lesson 8-8, you learned that the inverse of a function is the relation in which all the values of x and y are reversed. The graphs of y sin x and its inverse, x sin y, are shown below. y y y ⫽ sin x 2 1.0 3 2 ⫺2 ⫺ 3 2 ⫺ ⫺ 2 ⫺1.0 O 2 3 2 2 x x ⫽ sin y 2 Notice that the inverse is not a function, since it fails the vertical line test. None of the inverses of the trigonometric functions are functions. We must restrict the domain of trigonometric functions so that their inverses are functions. The values in these restricted domains are called principal values. Capital letters are used to distinguish trigonometric functions with restricted domains from the usual trigonometric functions. 806 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Doug Plummer/Photonica/Getty Images ⫺1.0 O ⫺ 2 ⫺ ⫺ 3 2 ⫺2 1.0 x Principal Values of Sine, Cosine, and Tangent Animation ca.algebra2.com x _ y = Sin x if and only if y = sin x and _ . 2 2 y = Cos x if and only if y = cos x and 0 x . _ y = Tan x if and only if y = tan x and _ 2 x 2. The inverse of the Sine function is called the Arcsine function and is symbolized by Sin-1 or Arcsin. The Arcsine function has the following characteristics. • Its domain is the set of real numbers from 1 to 1. • Its range is the set of angle measures from x_ . _ 2 2 • Sin x y if and only if Sin1 y x. • [Sin1 ° Sin](x) [Sin ° Sin1](x) x. y 2 y ⫽ sin⫺1 x ⫺1 ⫺ O 1 2 ⫺ 1 2 1 x 2 Look Back To review composition and functions, see Lesson 7-1. The definitions of the Arccosine and Arctangent functions are similar to the definition of the Arcsine function. Inverse Sine, Cosine, and Tangent • Given y = Sin x, the inverse Sine function is defined by y = Sin1 x or y = Arcsin x. • Given y = Cos x, the inverse Cosine function is defined by y = Cos1 x or y = Arccos x. • Given y = Tan x, the inverse Tangent function is defined by y = Tan1 x or y = Arctan x. The expressions in each row of the table below are equivalent. You can use these expressions to rewrite and solve trigonometric equations. y Sin x y Cos x y Tan x EXAMPLE x Sin1 y x Arcsin y x Cos1 y x Arccos y x Tan1 y x Arctan y Solve an Equation √ 3 Solve Sin x ⫽ _ by finding the value of x to the nearest degree. 2 √ √ √3 3 3 If Sin x _, then x is the least value whose sine is _. So, x Arcsin _. 2 2 2 Use a calculator to find x. KEYSTROKES: 2nd [SIN1] 2nd [2 ] 3 ⫼ 2 %.4%2 60 Therefore, x 60°. √ 2 2 1. Solve Cos x = -_ by finding the value of x to the nearest degree. Extra Examples at ca.algebra2.com Lesson 13-7 Inverse Trigonometric Functions 807 Many application problems involve finding the inverse of a trigonometric function. Apply an Inverse to Solve a Problem Real-World Link Bascule bridges have spans (leaves) that pivot upward utilizing gears, motors, and counterweights. Source: www.multnomah.lib. or.us DRAWBRIDGE Each leaf of a certain double-leaf drawbridge is 130 feet long. If an 80-foot wide ship needs to pass through the bridge, what is the minimum angle , to the nearest degree, which each leaf of the bridge should open so that the ship will fit? 130 ft 130 ft 80 ft When the two parts of the bridge are in their lowered position, the bridge spans 130 130 or 260 feet. In order for the ship to fit, the distance between the leaves must be at least 80 feet. 260 – 80 This leaves a horizontal distance of _ 2 or 90 feet from the pivot point of each leaf to the ship as shown in the diagram at the right. 130 ft 90 ft 130 ft 80 ft 90 ft To find the measure of angle , use the cosine ratio for right triangles. adj cos _ Cosine ratio hyp 9 0 cos _ 130 Replace adj with 90 and hyp with 130. 90 cos1 _ Inverse cosine function 46.2° Use a calculator. 130 Thus, the minimum angle each leaf of the bridge should open is 47°. 2. If each leaf of another drawbridge is 150 feet long, what is the minimum angle θ, to the nearest degree, that each leaf should open to allow a 90-foot-wide ship to pass? 46° Personal Tutor at ca.algebra2.com Angle Measure Remember that when evaluating an inverse trigonometric function the result is an angle measure. Trigonometric Values You can use a calculator to find the values of trigonometric expressions. EXAMPLE Find a Trigonometric Value Find each value. Write angle measures in radians. Round to the nearest hundredth. √ 3 a. ArcSin _ 2 KEYSTROKES: 2nd [SIN1] 2nd [2 ] 3 ⫼ 2 %.4%2 √3 Therefore, ArcSin _ 1.05 radians. 2 808 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions SuperStock 1.047197551 6 b. tan Cos1 _ ( Interactive Lab ca.algebra2.com 7 KEYSTROKES: ) TAN 1 2nd [COS ] 6 ⫼ 7 %.4%2 0.6009252126 6 0.60. Therefore, tan Cos1 _ ( (2) √ 3 3A. Arccos _ Example 1 (p. 807) Example 2 (p. 808) Example 3 (pp. 808–809) √ 2 2 5 ) 2. Arctan 0 = x 3. ARCHITECTURE The support for a roof is shaped like two right triangles as shown at the right. Find θ. 18 ft 18 ft 9 ft Find each value. Write degree measures in radians. Round to the nearest hundredth. ( ( 9) 1 9. tan (Sin _ 2) 2 6. cos Cos-1 _ 5. Cos-1 (-1) 3 ) 3 7. sin Sin-1 _ For See Exercises Examples 10–24 1 25–35 3 36, 37 2 ( 4 3B. cos Arcsin _ 1. x = Cos-1 _ ( ) HELP ) Solve each equation by finding the value of x to the nearest degree. √ 3 4. Tan-1 _ HOMEWORK 7 4 ( ) 3 8. sin Cos-1 _ 4 -1 Solve each equation by finding the value of x to the nearest degree. 1 10. x Cos1 _ 2 √ 3 13. x Arctan _ 3 1 11. Sin1 _ x 12. Arctan 1 x 2 ( ) 1 14. x Sin1 _ √ 2 15. x Cos1 0 Find each value. Write angle measures in radians. Round to the nearest hundredth. ( 1) 16. Cos1 _ 2 √ 3 2 √ 3 3 18. Arctan _ 2 ( 19. Arccos _ ( 17. Sin1 _ 1 20. sin Sin1 _ 7) 6 22. tan Cos1 _ ( 2 ) √ 3 3 ( 6) 3 24. cos (Arcsin _ 5) 5 21. cot Sin1 _ ) 23. sin Arctan _ 25. TRAVEL The cruise ship Reno sailed due west 24 miles before turning south. When the Reno became disabled and radioed for help, the rescue boat found that the fastest route to her covered a distance of 48 miles. The cosine of the angle at which the rescue boat should sail is 0.5. Find the angle , to the nearest tenth of a degree, at which the rescue boat should travel to aid the Reno. 24 mi 48 mi Not drawn to scale Lesson 13-7 Inverse Trigonometric Functions 809 PRACTICE See pages 922, 938. EXTRA Self-Check Quiz at ca.algebra2.com ★ 26. OPTICS You may have polarized sunglasses that eliminate glare by polarizing the light. When light is polarized, all of the waves are traveling in parallel planes. Suppose horizontally-polarized light with intensity I0 strikes a polarizing filter with its axis at an angle of with the horizontal. The intensity of the transmitted light It and are related by the equation I cos _t . If one fourth of the polarized light is transmitted through √ I0 the lens, what angle does the transmission axis of the filter make with the horizontal? 60° Polarizing filter Unpolarized light ⌱t Polarized light ⌱0 Transmission Axis Nonmetallic surface such as asphalt roadway or water Find each value. Write angle measures in radians. Round to the nearest hundredth. 32. 0.71 ( 28. cos Tan √3 0.5 29. tan (Arctan 3) 3 ) √2 1 30. cos Arccos ( _ ⫺0.5 31. Sin (tan _ 1.57 32. cos (Cos _ _ ) 2 ) 2 2) 4 3 1 33. Cos (Sin 90) 34. sin (2 Cos _ 0.96 35. sin (2 Sin _ 0.87 5) 2) does not exist 7 27. cot Sin1 _ 0.81 1 9 1 1 1 1 1 1 ★ 36. FOUNTAINS Architects who design fountains know that both the height and Real-World Link The shot is a metal sphere that can be made out of solid iron. Shot putters stand inside a seven-foot circle and must “put” the shot from the shoulder with one hand. Source: www.coolrunning. com.au 38–40. See Ch. 14 Answer Appendix. distance that a water jet will project is dependent on the angle at which the water is aimed. For a given angle , the ratio of the maximum height H of the parabolic arc to the horizontal distance D it travels is given by H _ _ = 1 tan . Find the value of , to the nearest degree, that will cause D 4 the arc to go twice as high as it travels horizontally. 83° y 37. TRACK AND FIELD A shot put must land in a 40° sector. ★ The vertex of the sector is at the origin and one side lies along the x-axis. An athlete puts the shot at a point with coordinates (18, 17), did the shot land in 40˚ O the required region? Explain your reasoning. See margin. For Exercises 38–40, consider f (x) = Sin-1 x + Cos-1 x. √3 √ 2 _ 1 _ 1 38. Make a table of values, recording x and f (x) for x = 0, _ , , , 1, _ , √ √ 3 2 _, _, -1}. 2 { 2 2 2 x 2 2 39. Make a conjecture about f (x). H.O.T. Problems 40. Considering only positive values of x, provide an explanation of why your conjecture might be true. √2 √ 2 41. Sample answer: Cos 45° = _; Cos-1_ = 45° 810 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions DUOMO/Steven E. Sutton 2 2 41. OPEN ENDED Write an equation giving the value of the Cosine function for an angle measure in its domain. Then, write your equation in the form of an inverse function. CHALLENGE For Exercises 42–44, use the following information. If the graph of the line y mx b intersects the x-axis such that an angle of is formed with the positive x-axis, then tan m. 42. Find the acute angle that the graph of 3x 5y 7 makes with the positive x-axis to the nearest degree. y x O 43. Determine the obtuse angle formed at the intersection of the graphs of 2x 5y 8 and 6x y 8. State the measure of the angle to the nearest degree. y ⫽ mx ⫹ b 44. Explain why this relationship, tan m, holds true. 45. Writing in Math Use the information on page 806 to explain how inverse trigonometric functions are used in road design. Include a few sentences describing how to determine the banking angle for a road and a description of what would have to be done to a road if the speed limit were increased and the banking angle was not changed. 46. ACT/SAT To the nearest degree, what is the angle of depression θ between the shallow end and the deep end of the swimming pool? 47. REVIEW If sin θ = 23 and -90º ≤ θ ≤ 90º, then cos (2θ) = 1 F -_ . 9 1 G -_ . 3 24 ft 4 ft 8 ft 1 H _ . 10 ft J 8 ft 3 _1 . 9 Side View of Swimming Pool A 25° C 53° B 37° D 73° Find the exact value of each function. (Lesson 13-6) 48. sin 660° 50. (sin 135°)2 (cos 675°)2 49. cos 25 Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. (Lesson 13-5) 51. a 3.1, b 5.8, A 30° 52. a 9, b 40, c 41 Use synthetic substitution to find f(3) and f(⫺4) for each function. (Lesson 6-7) 53. f(x) 5x2 6x 17 54. f(x) 3x2 2x 1 55. f(x) 4x2 10x 5 56. PHYSICS A toy rocket is fired upward from the top of a 200-foot tower at a velocity of 80 feet per second. The height of the rocket t seconds after firing is given by the formula h(t) 16t2 80t 200. Find the time at which the rocket reaches its maximum height of 300 feet. (Lesson 5-7) Lesson 13-7 Inverse Trigonometric Functions 811 CH APTER Study Guide and Review 13 Download Vocabulary Review from ca.algebra2.com Key Vocabulary Be sure the following Key Concepts are noted in your Foldable. Trigonometri c Functions Key Concepts Right Triangle Trigonometry (Lesson 13-1) adj opp opp • sin θ = _, cos θ = _, tan θ = _, hyp hyp adj adj hyp hyp _ _ csc θ = _ opp , sec θ = adj , cot θ = opp Angles and Angle Measure (Lesson 13-2) • An angle in standard position has its vertex at the origin and its initial side along the positive x-axis. • The measure of an angle is determined by the amount of rotation from the initial side to the terminal side. Trigonometric Functions of General Angles (Lesson 13-3) • You can find the exact values of the six trigonometric functions of θ, given the coordinates of a point P(x, y) on the terminal side of the angle. (Lesson 13-4 and 13-5) sin C sin A sin B _ • _ = _ a = c b • = b2 principal values (p. 806) quadrantal angles (p. 777) radian (p. 769) reference angle (p. 778) secant (p. 759) sine (p. 759) solve a right triangle (p. 762) standard position (p. 768) tangent (p. 759) terminal side (p. 768) trigonometric functions (p. 759) trigonometry (p. 759) unit circle (p. 769) Vocabulary Check State whether each sentence is true or false. If false, replace the underlined word(s) or number to make a true sentence. 1. When two angles in standard position have the same terminal side, they are called quadrantal angles. Law of Sines and Law of Cosines a2 angle of depression (p. 764) angle of elevation (p. 764) arccosine function (p. 807) arcsine function (p. 807) arctangent function (p. 807) circular function (p. 800) cosecant (p. 759) cosine (p. 759) cotangent (p. 759) coterminal angles (p. 771) initial side (p. 768) law of cosines (p. 793) law of sines (p. 786) period (p. 801) periodic (p. 801) 2. The Law of Sines is used to solve a triangle when the measure of two angles and the measure of any side are known. + c2 - 2bc cos A • b2 = a2 + c2 - 2ac cos B • c2 = a2 + b2 - 2ab cos C Circular and Inverse Trigonometric Functions (Lesson 13-6 and 13-7) • If the terminal side of an angle θ in standard position intersects the unit circle at P(x, y), then cos θ = x and sin θ = y. π • y = Sin x if y = sin x and -_ ≤x≤_ 2 π 2 812 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 3. Trigonometric functions can be defined by using a unit circle. 1 4. For all values of θ, csc θ = _ . cos θ 5. A radian is the measure of an angle on the unit circle where the rays of the angle intercept an arc with length 1 unit. 6. In a coordinate plane, the initial side of an angle is the ray that rotates about the center. Vocabulary Review at ca.algebra2.com Lesson-by-Lesson Review 13-1 Right Triangle Trigonometry (pp. 759–767) Solve ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 7. c = 16, a = 7 A C 8. A = 25°, c = 6 c b a B 9. B = 45°, c = 12 Example 1 Solve ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. Find a. 10. B = 83°, b = √ 31 11. a = 9, B = 49° 1 12. cos A = _ ,a=4 4 13. SKATEBOARDING A skateboarding ramp has an angle of elevation of 15.7°. Its vertical drop is 159 feet. Estimate the length of this ramp. B 14 A a C 11 a2 + b2 = c2 a2 + 112 = 142 a = √ 142 - 112 a ≈ 8.7 11 Find A. cos A = _ 14 Use a calculator. To the nearest degree A ≈ 38°. Find B. 38° + B ≈ 90° B ≈ 52° Therefore, a ≈ 8.7, A ≈ 38°, and B ≈ 52°. 13-2 Angles and Angle Measure (pp. 768–774) Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. 14. 255° 15. -210° 7π 16. _ 4 17. -4π Find one angle with positive measure and one angle with negative measure coterminal with each angle. 18. 205° 19. -40° 4π 20. _ 3 7π 21. -_ 4 22. BICYCLING A bicycle tire has a 12-inch radius. When riding at a speed of 18 miles per hour, determine the measure of the angle through which a point on the wheel travels every second. Round to both the nearest degree and nearest radian. Example 2 Rewrite the degree measure in radians and the radian measure in degrees. a. 240° π radians 240° = 240° _ ( 180° ) 4π 240π =_ radians or _ π b. _ 180 12 3 π π 180° _ = (_ radians _ 12 12 )( π radians ) 180° =_ or 15° 12 Chapter 13 Study Guide and Review 813 CH A PT ER 13 13-3 Study Guide and Review Trigonometric Functions of General Angles Find the exact value of the six trigonometric functions of θ if the terminal side of θ in standard position contains the given point. 23. P(2, 5) 24. P(15, -8) Find the exact value of each trigonometric function. 25. cos 3π 26. tan 120° V 2 (pp. 776–783) Example 3 Find the exact value of cos 150°. Because the terminal side of 150° lies in Quadrant II, the reference angle θ’ is 180° - 150° or 30°. The cosine function is negative in Quadrant II, so √ 3 2 cos 150° = -cos 30° or -_. sin 2θ 32 y 0 27. BASEBALL The formula R = _ gives the distance of a baseball that is hit at an initial velocity of V0 feet per second at an angle of θ with the ground. If the ball was hit with an initial velocity of 60 feet per second at an angle of 25°, how far was it hit? 13-4 Law of Sines ⫽ 150˚ x ' ⫽ 30˚ O (pp. 785–792) Determine whether each triangle has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 28. a = 24, b = 36, A = 64° 29. A = 40°, b = 10, a = 8 30. b = 10, c = 15, C = 66° 31. A = 82°, a = 9, b = 12 32. A = 105°, a = 18, b = 14 33. NAVIGATION Two fishing boats, A, and B, are anchored 4500 feet apart in open water. A plane flies at a constant speed in a straight path directly over the two boats, maintaining a constant altitude. At one point duing the flight, the angle of depression to A is 85°, and the angle of depression to B is 25°. Ten seconds later the plane has passed over A and spots B at a 35° angle of depression. How fast is the plane flying? 814 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions Example 4 Solve ABC. B First, find the measure of the third angle. 53° + 72° + B = 180° B = 55° 20 c 53˚ A b Now use the law of Sines to find b and c. Write two equations, each with one variable. sin A sin C _ =_ a c sin 53° sin 72° _ _ = c 20 20 sin 72° _ c= sin 53° c ≈ 23.8 72˚ C sin B sin A _ =_ b a sin 55° 20 sin 53° _ =_ b 20 20 sin 55° b=_ sin 53° b ≈ 20.5 Therefore, B = 55°, b ≈ 20.5, and c ≈ 23.8. Mixed Problem Solving For mixed problem-solving practice, see page 938. 13-5 Law of Cosines (pp. 793–798) Determine whether each triangle should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve each triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 34. C You are given the measure of two sides and the included angle. Begin by drawing a diagram and using the Law of Cosines to determine a. C a2 = b2 + c2 – 2bc cos A A 7 35˚ B 8 35. B Example 5 ABC for A = 62°, b = 15, and c = 12. 30˚ 20 45˚ B a 12 A 62˚ 15 C a2 = 152 + 122 – 2(15)(12) cos 62° a2 ≈ 200 A 36. C = 65°, a = 4, b = 7 37. A = 36°, a = 6, b = 8 38. b = 7.6, c = 14.1, A = 29° 39. SURVEYING Two sides of a triangular plot of land have lengths of 320 feet and 455 feet. The measure of the angle between those sides is 54.3°. Find the perimeter of the plot. a ≈ 14.1 Next, you can use the Law of Sines to find the measure of angle C. sin 62° sin C _ ≈_ 14.1 12 12 sin 62° or about 48.7° sin C ≈ _ 14.1 The measure of the angle B is approximately 180 – (62 + 48.7) or 69.3°. Therefore, a ≈ 14.1, C ≈ 48.7°, B ≈ 69.3°. Chapter 13 Study Guide and Review 815 CH A PT ER 13 13-6 Study Guide and Review Circular Functions (pp. 799–805) Find the exact value of each function. 40. sin (-150°) 41. cos 300° 42. (sin 45°)(sin 225°) Example 6 Find the exact value of 7π cos -_ . ( 4 ) P (cos , sin ) y 5π 43. sin _ 4 (0, 1) 44. (sin 30°)2 + (cos 30°)2 (1, 0) (⫺1, 0) 4 cos 150° + 2 sin 300° 45. __ x O 3 46. FERRIS WHEELS A Ferris wheel with a diameter of 100 feet completes 2.5 revolutions per minute. What is the period of the function that describes the height of a seat on the outside edge of the Ferris wheel as a function of time? 13-7 Inverse Trigonometric Functions 3 49. tan Arcsin _ 5 ) 50. cos (Sin -1 1) 51. FLYWHEELS The equation y = Arctan 1 describes the counterclockwise angle through which a flywheel rotates in 1 millisecond. Through how many degrees has the flywheel rotated after 25 milliseconds? 816 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions 7π 7π cos -_ = cos -_ + 2π ( 4 ) 4 √ 2 2 π = cos _ or _ 4 (pp. 806–811) Find each value. Write angle measures in radians. Round to the nearest hundredth. 47. Sin -1 (-1) 48. Tan -1 √ 3 ( (0, ⫺1) Example 7 Find the value of π Cos-1 tan -_ in radians. Round to 6 the nearest hundredth. ( ) [COS-1] TAN 2nd [π] ⫼ 6 2.186276035 %.4%2 KEYSTROKES: 2nd π Therefore, Cos-1 tan -_ ≈ 2.19 radians. 6 ( ) CH A PT ER 13 Practice Test 21. Suppose is an angle in standard position whose terminal side lies in Quadrant II. Find the exact values of the remaining five trigonometric functions for for Solve ABC by using the given measurements. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. A √ 3 2 cos _. 1. a 7, A 49° 2. B 75°, b 6 c b 3. A 22°, c 8 a C 4. a 7, c 16 B Rewrite each degree measure in radians and each radian measure in degrees. 22. GEOLOGY From the top of the cliff, a geologist spots a dry riverbed. The measurement of the angle of depression to the riverbed is 70°. The cliff is 50 meters high. How far is the riverbed from the base of the cliff? 6. _ 6 8. 330° 5. 275° 11 7. _ 2 23. MULTIPLE CHOICE Triangle ABC has a right angle at C, angle B = 30°, and BC = 6. Find the area of triangle ABC. 10. _ 4 7 9. 600° Find the exact value of each expression. Write angle measures in degrees. 11. cos (120°) 7 12. sin _ 13. cot 300° 7 14. sec _ 6 ( √ 3 ) 15. Sin1 _ 2 16. Arctan 1 17. tan 135° 5 18. csc _ ) 6 19. Determine the number of possible solutions for a triangle in which A 40°, b 10, and a 14. If a solution exists, solve the triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. 20. Determine whether ABC, with A = 22°, a = 15, and b = 18, has no solution, one solution, or two solutions. Then solve the triangle, if possible. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. Chapter Test at ca.algebra2.com B √ 3 units2 C 6 √ 3 units2 4 ( A 6 units2 D 12 units2 24. Find the area of DEF to the nearest tenth. % M $ M & 25. Determine whether ABC, with b = 11, c = 14, and A = 78°, should be solved by beginning with the Law of Sines or Law of Cosines. Then solve the triangle. Round measures of sides to the nearest tenth and measures of angles to the nearest degree. Chapter 13 Practice Test 817 CH A PT ER California Standards Practice 13 Cumulative, Chapters 1–13 Read each question. Then fill in the correct answer on the answer document provided by your teacher or on a sheet of paper. 6 The pattern of dots shown below continues infinitely, with more dots being added at each step. •• •• Step 1 1 A math teacher is randomly distributing 15 yellow folders and 10 green folders. What is the probability that the first folder she hands out will be yellow and the second folder will be green? 1 A_ 2 C _ 5 23 D_ 25 24 1 B _ 4 ••• ••• Step 2 •••• •••• Step 3 Which expression can be used to determine the number of dots in the nth step? F G H J 2n n(n + 2) n(n + 1) 2(n + 1) 2 Find the probability of rolling three 3s if a number cube is rolled three times. 1 1 F _ H_ 216 6 1 G_ 1 J _ 4 36 3 The variables a, b, c, d, and e are integers in a sequence, where a 2 and b 12. To find the next term, double the last term and add that result to one less than the next-to-last term. For example, c 25, because 2(12) 24, 2 – 1 1, and 24 + 1 25. What is the value of e? A 74 B 144 C 146 D 256 4 In the figure, t = 2v, what is the value of 7 Use synthetic substitution to find f(–2) for the function below. f(x) = x 4 + 10x2 + x + 8 A B C D –18 –10 2 8 8 Solve x2 – 5x < –14. F G H J (–7 < x < 2) (–7 < x > 2) (–2 < x < 7) (–2 < x > 7) x? t˚ 9 Find XY if X = [3 8] and Y = x˚ (t ⫺ v )˚ (t ⫹ v )˚ 5 When six consecutive integers are multiplied, their product is 0. What is their greatest possible sum? 818 Chapter 13 Trigonometric Functions A B C D [12 [18 [30 [60 [ 40 –26 ] 2] 16] –16] –16] California Standards Practice at ca.algebra2.com More California Standards Practice For practice by standard, see pages CA1–CA43. 1 10 The graph of the equation y = _ x + 2 is 2 given below. Suppose you graph y = x – 1 on the grid. Question 12 When answering questions, make sure you know exactly what the question is asking you to find. For example, if you find the time that it takes him to drive home from the gym, you have not solved the problem. You need to find the distance the gym is from his home. Y X / 13 GEOMETRY Jamal is putting a stone walkway around a circular pond. He has enough stones to make a walkway 144 feet long. If he uses all of the stones to surround the pond, what is the radius of the pond? What is the solution to the system of equations? F (0, –1) G (7, 6) H (6, 5) J no solution 144 F _ π ft 72 G_ π ft H 144π ft J 72π ft 11 Identify the domain and range of the function f(x) = 4x + 1 – 8. A D: –3 ≤ x ≤ 1, R: y ≥ –8 B D: all real numbers, R: y ≥ –8 C D: –3 ≤ x ≤ 1, R: all real numbers D D: all real numbers, R: all real numbers Pre-AP/Anchor Problemm 14 Sara received $2,500 for a graduation gift. She put it into a savings account in which the interest rate was 5.5% per year. 12 Perry drove to the gym at an average rate of 30 miles per hour. It took him 45 minutes. Going home, he took the same route, but drove at a rate of 45 miles per hour. How many miles is it to his house from the gym? a. How much did she have in her savings account after 5 years? b. After how many years will the amount in her savings account have doubled? NEED EXTRA HELP? If You Missed Question... 1 2 3 4 11-2 11-1 6-7 5-8 4-3 3-1 22.0 22.0 3.0 8.0 6.0 2.0 Go to Lesson... 12-4 12-8 11-1 Prior course For Help with Standard PS1.0 PS1.0 22.0 G12.0 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 2-6 8-4 Prior course 9-1 1.0 1A15.0 G8.0 12.0 Chapter 13 California Standards Practice 819